Indre Fosen
Indre Fosen kommune | |||
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Municipality | |||
View of the Rissa Church | |||
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Indre Fosen within Trøndelag | |||
Coordinates: 63°38′38″N 10°11′13″E / 63.64382°N 10.18707°ECoordinates: 63°38′38″N 10°11′13″E / 63.64382°N 10.18707°E | |||
Country | Norway | ||
County | Trøndelag | ||
District | Fosen | ||
Established | 1 Jan 2018 | ||
Administrative centre | Årnset | ||
Government | |||
• Mayor (2018) | Steinar Saghaug (H) | ||
Area | |||
• Total | 1,051.59 km2 (406.02 sq mi) | ||
• Land | 987.55 km2 (381.30 sq mi) | ||
• Water | 64.04 km2 (24.73 sq mi) 6% | ||
Area rank | #98 in Norway | ||
Population (2017) | |||
• Total | 10,108 | ||
• Rank | #114 in Norway | ||
• Density | 10.2/km2 (26/sq mi) | ||
• Change (10 years) | 2.6% | ||
Demonym(s) |
Fosning Rissværing Leksværing[1] | ||
Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) | ||
• Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) | ||
ISO 3166 code | NO-5054 | ||
Official language form | Neutral | ||
Website |
indrefosen | ||
Indre Fosen is a municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is located in the traditional district of Fosen. The administrative centre of the municipality is the village of Årnset. Other villages in Indre Fosen include Askjem, Dalbygda, Hasselvika, Husbysjøen, Leira, Leksvik, Råkvåg, Rørvika, Seter, Stadsbygd, and Vanvikan. The Norwegian County Road 755 runs through the municipality.
The 1,052-square-kilometre (406 sq mi) municipality is the 98th largest by area out of the 422 municipalities in Norway. Indre Fosen is the 114th most populous municipality in Norway with a population of 10,108. The municipality's population density is 10.2 inhabitants per square kilometre (26/sq mi) and its population has increased by 2.6% over the last decade.[2]
General information
The municipality was established on 1 January 2018, the same day that Trøndelag county was established. Indre Fosen straddles the former county border, as it was formed by the unification of the neighboring municipalities of Leksvik (formerly in Nord-Trøndelag) and Rissa (formerly in Sør-Trøndelag).[3]
The coat of arms of Indre Fosen are fairly modern; they were originally granted to the old Leksvik Municipality on 28 September 1990. When the new municipality was formed, it was decided to keep the arms of Leksvik for the new municipality, so they were re-granted to Indre Fosen in 2016 to take effect on 1 January 2018.[3] The arms show the blue Trondheimsfjord and a silver part representing the land with a clover at the end of it to represent life and growth.[4]
Name
The municipality was named after the traditional district of Fosen in which it is located. The district is named after the island of Storfosna ("Big Fosen") in Ørland municipality. The Old Norse form of the name was Fólgsn which means "hiding place" or "hidden port".[5] The first word Indre means "inner" in the Norwegian language, here meaning the inner part of the district of Fosen.
Churches
The Church of Norway has six parishes (Norwegian: sogn, which is both singular and plural) within the municipality. Together with five other municipalities on the Fosen peninsula (Bjugn, Osen, Roan, Ørland, and Åfjord), Indre Fosen is part of Fosen prosti in the Diocese of Nidaros.
Parish (Sokn) | Church Name | Location of the Church | Year Built |
---|---|---|---|
Hasselvika | Hasselvika Church | Hasselvika | 1951 |
Leksvik | Leksvik Church | Leksvik | 1670 |
Rissa | Rissa Church | Leira | 1888 |
Rein Church | Reinsgrenda | 1932 | |
Stadsbygd | Stadsbygd Church | Stadsbygd | 1842 |
Stranda | Stranda Church | Vanvikan | 1897 |
Sør-Stjørna | Frengen Church | Frengen | 1972 |
Ramsvik Church | Råkvåg | 1909 |
History
The first inhabitants are believed to have moved to this area some 3,000 years ago. They left several pieces of cutting tools which are now placed in museums. The Leksvik area does not appear in recorded history before the Viking Age when the villages of Leksvik and Hindrem became quite important in the local area. In both Leksvik and Hindrem there have been found great tombs and ruins of buildings and longboats. On Borgen, there is a hill between Hindrem and Seter that may have been a great Viking fortress, but this could also be tracks made by the glaciers during the last ice age. After the Black Death struck Norway in 1349, Leksvik fell into silence for some 300 years.
In more modern history, Leksvik and Hindrem are small and relatively isolated villages, north of Trondheimsfjord. Two churches stood here, a church in Leksvik and a stave church in Hindrem, but this broke down in 1655 and was replaced by a modern wooden church. In the 19th century, the church of Hindrem was demolished, and the new Stranda Church was built in Vanvikan. Leksvik became well known for its goats and had 5,000 of them at their peak number.
During World War II, Leksvik was settled by German troops with the main camp on the top of Våttåhaugen, a hill north of the village of Leksvik. But as a small and isolated village, nothing of great importance happened there during the war, and it was mostly peaceful although bombs fell over Trondheim, on the south side of the fjord. After electric power first came to Leksvik, Bjørn Lyng founded the first industry in Vanvikan and Leksvik. After the first road was finally finished in the early 1960s, industry grew rapidly and replaced the goats.
In April 1978, the Rissa area in what is now Indre Fosen was home to a quick-clay landslide which encompassed an area of 330,000 square metres (3,600,000 sq ft) and sent 6,000,000 cubic metres (7,800,000 cu yd) of clay from the Årnset area on the shore into the Botn lake, causing a miniature tsunami on the north shore in the village of Leira. This slide is particularly famous because a large portion of the slide happened to be recorded on film by two amateur photographers.
Geography
Indre Fosen was located on the southern part of the Fosen peninsula along the coast of Trondheimsfjorden and the Stjørnfjorden, surrounding the municipality on three sides by water. There are several large lakes located in Indre Fosen including Storvatnet, Meltingvatnet, and Botn. The municipalities of Åfjord, Verran, and Inderøy lie to the north and the municipalities of Bjugn and Ørland lie to the west.
The Flakk–Rørvik Ferry crosses the Trondheimsfjord connecting the village of Rørvik to the city of Trondheim to the south.
Government
All municipalities in Norway, including Indre Fosen, are responsible for primary education (kindergarten through 10th grade), outpatient health services, senior citizen services, unemployment and other social services, zoning, economic development, and municipal roads. The municipality is governed by a municipal council of elected representatives, which in turn elects a mayor.
For the purposes of judicial divisions, the municipality is part of the Fosen District Court which is under the Frostating Court of Appeal.
Municipal council
The municipal council (Kommunestyre) of Indre Fosen is made up of 48 representatives. Rather than have new elections when the municipality and its council were formed, members were carried over onto the new council. The council is essentially a merger of the old municipal councils of Leksvik and Rissa, with all members of the old serving on the new council. The first elections to the Indre Fosen council is scheduled for 2019. Currently, the party breakdown is as follows:[6]
Party Name | Name in Norwegian | Number of representatives | |
---|---|---|---|
Labour Party | Arbeiderpartiet | 15 | |
Progress Party | Fremskrittspartiet | 3 | |
Conservative Party | Høyre | 12 | |
Christian Democratic Party | Kristelig Folkeparti | 2 | |
Green Party | Miljøpartiet De Grønne | 1 | |
Pensioners' Party | Pensjonistpartiet | 2 | |
Centre Party | Senterpartiet | 9 | |
Socialist Left Party | Sosialistisk Venstreparti | 2 | |
Liberal Party | Venstre | 2 | |
Total number of members: | 48 |
References
- ↑ "Navn på steder og personer: Innbyggjarnamn" (in Norwegian). Språkrådet. Retrieved 2015-12-01.
- ↑ Statistisk sentralbyrå (2017). "Table: 06913: Population 1 January and population changes during the calendar year (M)" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2018-03-05.
- 1 2 Rosvold, Knut A., ed. (2018-02-26). "Indre Fosen". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 2018-01-06.
- ↑ "Civic heraldry of Norway - Norske Kommunevåpen". Heraldry of the World. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
- ↑ Haugen, Morten, ed. (2017-12-12). "Fosen". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
- ↑ "Table: 04813: Members of the local councils, by party/electoral list at the Municipal Council election (M)" (in Norwegian). Statistics Norway. 2015.
External links
Media related to Indre Fosen at Wikimedia Commons Trøndelag travel guide from Wikivoyage