Nord-Aurdal Explained

Nord-Aurdal
Former Name:Nordre Aurdal herred
Idnumber:3451
County:Innlandet
District:Valdres
Capital:Fagernes
Established:1 Jan 1838
Preceded:none
Demonym:Nordaurdøl
Language:Neutral
Webpage:www.nord-aurdal.kommune.no
Mayor:Knut Arne Fjelltun
Mayor Party:Sp
Mayor As Of:2019
Area Rank:128
Area Total Km2:906.47
Area Land Km2:849.13
Area Water Km2:57.34
Area Water Percent:6.3
Population As Of:2023
Population Rank:152
Population Total:6401
Population Density Km2:7.5
Population Increase:0.1
Coordinates:60.9597°N 9.2642°W
Utm Zone:32V
Utm Northing:6758349
Utm Easting:0514319
Geo Cat:adm2nd

Nord-Aurdal is a municipality in Innlandet county, Norway. It is located in the traditional district of Valdres. The administrative centre of the municipality is the town Fagernes. Other urban centres in Nord-Aurdal include the villages of Aurdal, Leira, and Skrautvål. The municipality is served by Fagernes Airport, Leirin. In Nord-Aurdal, there is an alpine skiing center called Valdres Alpinsenter.[1]

The 906km2 municipality is the 128th largest by area out of the 356 municipalities in Norway. Nord-Aurdal is the 152nd most populous municipality in Norway with a population of 6,401. The municipality's population density is and its population has increased by 0.1% over the previous 10-year period.[2] [3]

General information

The parish of Nordre Aurdal was established as a municipality on 1 January 1838 (see formannskapsdistrikt law). On 1 January 1894, the new Etnedal Municipality was established by merging the eastern valley area of Nordre Etnedal (population: 362) from Nordre Aurdal municipality and the Søndre Etnedal area (population: 1,331) from the neighboring municipality of Søndre Aurdal. On 1 January 1979, there was a border adjustment in an unpopulated area where part of Etnedal was transferred to Nord-Aurdal and another part of Nord-Aurdal that was transferred to Etnedal. Then on 1 January 1984, the unpopulated northern side of the Makalaus mountain was transferred from Sør-Aurdal to Nord-Aurdal.[4]

Name

The municipality (originally the parish) is named after the Aurdalen valley (Norse, Old: Aurardalr) since it was a central geographic feature of the area. The first word in the name is which is essentially a prefix that means "north". The second word comes from the local valley name. The first element of that word is the genitive case of the old river name, Norse, Old: Aur, now named Norwegian: Bøaelva. The river name comes from the word which means "gravel". The last element of the second word is which means "valley" or "dale". Historically, the name of the municipality was spelled Nordre Aurdal. On 3 November 1917, a royal resolution changed the spelling of the name of the municipality to Nord-Aurdal.[5] Both and mean "north" (more specifically, "nordre" means "northern"), so the name Nord-Aurdal means "(the) northern (part of) Aurdal". (The Church of Norway parish of Aurdal that had existed for centuries was divided into two in 1805, just over 30 years before the parish borders were used to defin the new municipality that was established in 1838.)[6]

Coat of arms

The coat of arms was granted by royal decree on 13 December 1985. The official blazon is "Or, three cinquefoils azure" (Norwegian: På gull grunn tre blå fembladingar, 2-1). This means the arms have a field (background) has a tincture of Or which means it is commonly colored yellow, but if it is made out of metal, then gold is used. The charge is three five-petaled flowers. The arms show three blue flowers of the species Gentiana nivalis which are commonly called "Snow Gentian". The flowers, which are locally known as "the blue eyes of Christ", grow all over Norway, but they grow abundantly in this area. Three flowers were chosen to represent the three main settlements of the municipality: Aurdal, Fagernes, and Leira. This type of flower only opens in sunlight and heat, so it was chosen to symbolize being open and positive. The arms were designed by Bjørn Arnesen who based it off an idea by Ivar Aars. The municipal flag has the same design as the coat of arms.[7] [8] [9] [10]

Churches

The Church of Norway has six parishes (Norwegian: sokn) within the municipality of Nord-Aurdal. It is part of the Valdres prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Hamar.

Churches in Nord-Aurdal!Parish (Norwegian: sokn)!!Church name!!Location of the church!!Year built
AurdalAurdal ChurchAurdal1737
SkrautvålSkrautvål ChurchSkrautvål1785
SvenesStrand ChurchSynnstrond1735
TingnesTingnes ChurchFagernes1972
TisleidalenTisleidalen ChurchHovda1957
UlnesUlnes ChurchUlnes1250

Geography

Number of minorities (1st and 2nd generation) in Nord-Aurdal by country of origin in 2017[11]
AncestryNumber
Lithuania81
Poland73
Romania62
Netherlands38
36
Eritrea34
Denmark33
Nord-Aurdal municipality is located to the north of Sør-Aurdal Municipality, east of Etnedal Municipality and Gausdal Municipality, and south of Øystre Slidre Municipality and Vestre Slidre Municipality. To the west, it is bordered by Hemsedal Municipality and Gol Municipality in Buskerud county. Nord-Aurdal measures about 52.4km (32.6miles) on the north–south axis and 43.3km (26.9miles) on the east–west axis.

The municipality lies in the western side of Innlandet county. Although Fagernes is the administrative center of Nord-Aurdal, the village of Aurdal was the historic centre of the centuries-old Church of Norway parish of Aurdal. Nord-Aurdal is part of the traditional district of Valdres in the central part of southern Norway, situated between the valleys of Gudbrandsdal and Hallingdal.

The highest point in Nord-Aurdal is the Duptjernkampen at 1325m (4,347feet). About 50% of the land is above 900m (3,000feet). The Tisleifjorden and Aurdalsfjorden are large inland lakes that are located in Nord-Aurdal. The river Begna flows through the municipality as well, with the Strondafjorden being a large lake that the river flows through.

Government

Nord-Aurdal Municipality is responsible for primary education (through 10th grade), outpatient health services, senior citizen services, welfare and other social services, zoning, economic development, and municipal roads and utilities. The municipality is governed by a municipal council of directly elected representatives. The mayor is indirectly elected by a vote of the municipal council.[12] The municipality is under the jurisdiction of the Vestre Innlandet District Court and the Eidsivating Court of Appeal.

Municipal council

The municipal council Norwegian: (Kommunestyre) of Nord-Aurdal is made up of 21 representatives that are elected to four year terms. The tables below show the current and historical composition of the council by political party.

Mayors

The mayors of Nord-Aurdal:[13]

Attractions

The Valdres Folkemuseum is located just outside Fagernes and has large collections of old houses, textiles, and music instruments.

Notable people

International relations

See main article: List of twin towns and sister cities in Norway.

Twin towns — Sister cities

Nord-Aurdal has sister city agreements with the following places:[18]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Nord-Aurdal . . . 2022-06-26 . Svendsen . Trond Olav . Norwegian . 2022-09-18.
  2. Web site: Statistisk sentralbyrå . Statistics Norway . Table: 06913: Population 1 January and population changes during the calendar year (M) . Norwegian.
  3. Web site: Statistisk sentralbyrå . Statistics Norway . 09280: Area of land and fresh water (km²) (M) . Norwegian.
  4. Book: Jukvam, Dag . Historisk oversikt over endringer i kommune- og fylkesinndelingen . . 1999 . 9788253746845 . no.
  5. 1917 . Norsk Lovtidende. 2den Afdeling. 1917. Samling af Love, Resolutioner m.m . . no . Kristiania, Norge . Grøndahl og Søns Boktrykkeri . 1057–1065.
  6. Book: Rygh, Oluf . Oluf Rygh

    . Norske gaardnavne: Kristians amt (anden halvdel) . 1902 . W. C. Fabritius & sønners bogtrikkeri . 4-2 . Kristiania, Norge . 221 . no . Oluf Rygh.

  7. Web site: Civic heraldry of Norway - Norske Kommunevåpen . 2023-04-22 . Heraldry of the World.
  8. Web site: Nord-Aurdal, Oppland (Norway) . 2023-04-22 . Flags of the World.
  9. Web site: 1985-12-13 . Godkjenning av våpen og flagg . 2023-04-22 . Lovdata.no . Norges kommunal- og arbeidsdepartementet . no.
  10. Web site: Kommunevåpenet for Nord-Aurdal . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110716202945/http://www.nord-aurdal.kommune.no/artikkel.aspx?MId1=1&AId=138&back=1 . 2011-07-16 . 2009-01-04 . Nord-Aurdal kommune . no.
  11. Web site: Immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents, by immigration category, country background and percentages of the population . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150702101705/https://www.ssb.no/statistikkbanken/selectvarval/Define.asp?subjectcode=&ProductId=&MainTable=FolkInnvkatLand&nvl=&PLanguage=1&nyTmpVar=true&CMSSubjectArea=befolkning&KortNavnWeb=innvbef&StatVariant=&checked=true . 2 July 2015 . 29 June 2015 . ssb.no . en.
  12. Encyclopedia: kommunestyre . . . 2022-09-20 . Hansen . Tore . Norwegian . Vabo . Signy Irene . 2022-10-14.
  13. Web site: 2019-10-14 . Ordførere i gjennom tidene . 2023-04-22 . Nord-Aurdal kommune . no.
  14. Web site: Hamsun, Knut . 2022-09-18 . . no.
  15. News: Knut Hamsun . https://web.archive.org/web/20050308034034/http://www.dagbladet.no/forfatter/knut_hamsun.html . 2005-03-08 . . no.
  16. News: Knut Hamsun . https://web.archive.org/web/20050829062940/http://aftenposten.no/alex/litterat/forfatte/hamsunkn.htm . 2005-08-29 . . no.
  17. Encyclopedia: J.C.M. Hanson . . . Lovell . Odd . 2022-06-29 . Norwegian . 2022-09-18.
  18. Web site: Vennskapsbyer . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110716203014/http://www.nord-aurdal.kommune.no/Artikkel.aspx?AId=36&back=1&MId1=21&MId2=66&MId3=67 . 2011-07-16 . 2009-01-04 . Nord-Aurdal kommune . no.