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Nord-Bindalen

Coordinates: 65°05′53″N 12°25′16″E / 65.09806°N 12.42111°E / 65.09806; 12.42111
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Nord-Bindalen
Parish
Nord-Bindalen is located in Nordland
Nord-Bindalen
Nord-Bindalen
Location in Nordland
Coordinates: 65°05′53″N 12°25′16″E / 65.09806°N 12.42111°E / 65.09806; 12.42111
CountryNorway
RegionNorthern Norway
CountyNordland
DistrictHelgeland
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)

Nord-Bindalen or Nordbindalen is a former administrative entity in the Helgeland district of Nordland county, Norway. It was in existence from 1658 to 1852. It is located in the present-day Bindal Municipality.

History

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The ancient district of Bindalen belonged to Namdalen. However, in 1658, when the county (län) of Trondheim was ceded to Sweden in the Treaty of Roskilde, the status of the border district was ambiguous, with residents paying some taxes to Helgeland, in Nordland, and some to Namdalen. The decision was then made to redraw the county boundary to run down the Bindalsfjorden, assigning the northern part, Nord-Bindalen, to Nordland county, which remained in the Kingdom of Denmark-Norway, while the larger part remained in Trondheim county and became Sør-Bindalen and part of the Kingdom of Sweden.[1] The two remained separate after Trøndelag county was reunited with Norway in 1660.[2]

In 1815, a single parish of Bindalen was created from the larger parish of Brønnø, despite the secular division of the community.[3][4] The 1838 formannskapsdistrikt law divided the country into civil municipalities which were supposed to correspond to the parishes of the Church of Norway. The parish of Bindalen (which straddled the county border) was created as Bindal Municipality, but the southern part was part of Nordre Trondheim county and the northern part of the municipality belonged to Nordland county, making for an unusual situation. In 1852, the county border was moved so that all of Bindal Municipality was located in Nordland county.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Nielsen, Yngvar (1897). "Kampen om Trondhjem 1657-1660". Festskrift Udgivet i Anledning af Trondhjems 900 Aars Jubilaeum 1897. Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters. p. 99. Der kunde her tvistes om Bindalen, enten den skulde høre til Helgeland eller til Namdalen. Distriktet stod i et noget uklart Forhold; nogle Afgifter betalte dets Indbyggere til Fogden i Helgeland, andre til Fogden i Namdalen, saaledes at der med Grund kunde reises Tvivl om, hvor det rettelig hørte hen. Man enedes, efter nogen Forhandling om at dele Distriktet. Nogle af dets Gaarde henlagdes til Helgeland og forbleve Norske, medens den største Del, som hørende til Namdalen, skulde lyde under den svenske Krone.
  2. ^ Helland, Amund, ed. (1909). "Part 3: Byerne og Søndre og Nordre Helgeland Fogden". Norges Land og Folk: Topografisk-Statistisk Beskrevet. Vol. 18 Nordlands Amt. Kristiania: Aschehoug. p. 45. Mellem Nordre Trondhjems amt og Nordland var tidligere Bindalsfjorden grænsen. Det som laa paa søndre side af fjorden, kaldtes Sør-Bindalen og hørte til Namdalen, medens nordsiden kaldtes Nord-Bindalen og udgjorde en del af Nordland.
  3. ^ Norges Land og Folk. 1908. p. 45. Da Bindalen i 1815 i geistlig henseende blev skilt fra Brønnø som eget sognekald, blev det nye præstegjeld regnet til Tromsø stift; i civil henseende vedblev distriktet at være delt.
  4. ^ Storm, Gustav, ed. (1895). Historisk-Topografiske Skrifter om Norge og Norske Landsdele: Forfattede i Norge det 16de Aarhundrede. Christiania: Brøgger. p. 179 and footnotes. Bindalen blev eget Præstegjeld (under Tromsø Stift) 1815...I civile Sager hørte Sør-Bindalen til Namdalen indtil 1852.
  5. ^ Kommune- og fylkesinndelingen i et Norge i forandring (in Norwegian). Oslo: Statens forvaltningstjeneste, Seksjon Statens trykking. 1992. ISBN 8258302612. Retrieved 2024-11-02.