World traveling Baháʼí journalist Martha Root subsequently visited King Haakon VII of Norway among her many trips.
[3] The seventh tablet was translated and presented by Mirza Ahmad Sohrab on April 4, 1919, and published in Star of the West magazine on December 12, 1919.
Show ye an effort and after this war spread ye the synopsis of the divine teachings in the British Isles, France, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Russia, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Switzerland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Holland, Portugal, Rumania, Serbia, Montenegro, Bulgaria, Greece, Andorra, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, San Marino, Balearic Isles, Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily, Crete, Malta, Iceland, Faroe Islands, Shetland Islands, Hebrides and Orkney Islands.
"[5]Following the release of these tablets a few Baháʼís began moving to Scandinavian countries: Starting in 1946, following World War II, Shoghi Effendi drew up plans for the American (US and Canada) Baháʼí community to send pioneers to Europe including Denmark; the pioneers set up a European Teaching Committee chaired by Edna True.
[11] Some credit the success of the American pioneers in Denmark to the Danes being attracted to their "cultural style" – "emancipated, independent, and idealistic".
By 1979 the community's progressing organization of assemblies and petitioning, lead to government recognition of the Baháʼí Faith as a legal institution with privileges, including the authority to grant marriages.
[1][20] Additionally the Baháʼís of Denmark are an object of academic study by University of Copenhagen Professor Margit Warburg and her students.