Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Ministry of Industry: Industridepartementet: 1947–1987 Ministry of Industry: Næringsdepartementet: 1988–1993 Ministry of Industry and Energy: Nærings- og energidepartementet: 1993–1997 Ministry of Trade and Industry: Nærings- og handelsdepartementet: 1997–2013 Ministry of Fisheries: Fiskeridepartementet: 1946–2004 Ministry of ...
Arts Council Norway (Norsk Kulturråd): issues grants to culture, and functions as an advisory board for the ministry in culture affairs; Bunad- og folkedraktrådet: advises on and promotes the use of bunad, the Norwegian national costume; Det praktisk-teologiske seminar: educates ministers of the Church of Norway
Pages in category "Government ministries of Norway" The following 33 pages are in this category, out of 33 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
The ministry was established in 1814, following the dissolution of Denmark–Norway, in which the joint central government administration of the two formally separate but closely integrated kingdoms, had been based in Copenhagen. Originally named the Ministry of Church and Education Affairs, the ministry was the first of six government ...
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs was established on the same day that Norway declared the dissolution of the union with Sweden: June 7, 1905. Although diplomats could not present credentials to foreign governments until the Swedish king formally renounced his right to the Norwegian throne, a number of unofficial representatives worked on the provisional government's behalf until the first ...
The Royal Norwegian Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development (Norwegian: Kommunal- og distriktsdepartementet, KDD) is a Norwegian ministry established in 1948. It is responsible for the housing and building, regional and rural policy, municipal and county administration and finances, and the conduct of elections. [2]
The Royal Norwegian Ministry of Health and Care Services (Helse- og omsorgsdepartementet) is a Norwegian government ministry in charge of health policy, public health, health care services, and health legislation in Norway.
The Steward of Norway, styled Rigsstatholder in Danish (riksstattholder in modern Norwegian spelling), meaning Royal steward of the realm (see Steward), was the appointed head of the Norwegian Government in the absence of the Monarch during the Dano-Norwegian union. As Norway was a separate kingdom, with its own laws and institutions, the ...