Agder
County in Southern Norway From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
County in Southern Norway From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Agder is a county (fylke) and traditional region in the southern part of Norway[4] and is coextensive with the Southern Norway region. The county was established on 1 January 2020, when the old Vest-Agder and Aust-Agder counties were merged.[5] Since the early 1900s, the term Sørlandet ("south country, south land, southland") has been commonly used for this region, sometimes with the inclusion of neighbouring Rogaland. Before that time, the area was considered a part of Western Norway.[6]
Agder County
Agder fylke | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 58°46′46.53″N 7°40′6.45″E | |
Country | Norway |
County | Agder |
District | Southern Norway |
Established | 1 Jan 2020 |
• Preceded by | Aust-Agder and Vest-Agder counties |
Administrative centre | Kristiansand |
Government | |
• Body | Agder County Municipality |
• Governor (2022) | Gina Lund (Ap) |
• County mayor (2019) | Arne Thomassen (H) |
Area | |
• Total | 16,433.67 km2 (6,345.08 sq mi) |
• Land | 14,980.95 km2 (5,784.18 sq mi) |
• Water | 1,452.72 km2 (560.90 sq mi) 8.8% |
• Rank | #8 in Norway |
Population (2021) | |
• Total | 308,843 |
• Rank | #8 in Norway |
• Density | 20.6/km2 (53/sq mi) |
• Change (10 years) | +9.3% |
Demonym | Egde or Egd[1] |
Official language | |
• Norwegian form | Neutral |
Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) |
ISO 3166 code | NO-42[3] |
Website | Official website |
The area was a medieval petty kingdom, and after Norway's unification became known as Egdafylki and later Agdesiden, a county within the kingdom of Norway. The name Agder was not used after 1662, when the area was split into smaller governmental units called Nedenæs, Råbyggelaget, Lister, and Mandal. The name was resurrected in 1919 when two counties of Norway that roughly corresponded to the old Agdesiden county were renamed Aust-Agder (East Agder) and Vest-Agder (West Agder). Even before the two counties joined in 2020, they cooperated in many ways; the University of Agder had sites in both Aust-Agder and Vest-Agder, as did many other institutions, such as the Diocese of Agder og Telemark, the Agder Court of Appeal, and the Agder Police District.
The name Agder is older than the Norwegian language. Its meaning is not known. Just as the Norwegian language derives from Old Norse, Agder derives from the Old Norse word Agðir. In the early Viking Age, before Harald Fairhair, Agðir was a petty kingdom inhabited by a people named after it, the Egðir.[6]
Nothing in Old Norse gives any hint as to the word's meaning; it was not produced (from known segments) in Old Norse, which means the name is older still. The Egðir are believed to be the same etymologically as the Augandzi people mentioned in the Getica of Jordanes, who wrote of Scandza (Scandinavia) in the 6th century. If Jordanes's Scandza is a palatalized form of *Scandia, then Augandzi is likely a palatalized form of *Augandii, residents of *Augandia.[7]
A name of that period would have to be closer to Proto-Germanic; in fact, a word of that period does present itself and fits the geographical lore of the times: *agwjō (meaning "island"),[8] which Jordanes and all his predecessors writing of Scandinavia believed it to be. A simple metathesis produces a possibly late form, *augjo-, but this derivation is speculative. There is no other evidence on Auganza, and its connection to Egder is hypothetical too.
On 1 January 1838, the formannskapsdistrikt law went into effect, creating local municipalities all over Norway. The municipalities have changed over time through mergers and divisions as well as numerous boundary adjustments. When Agder county was established on 1 January 2020, it had 25 municipalities.
Number | Municipal number | Arms | Name | Establishment | Former municipal number (pre-2020 mergers) | Former county |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4201 | Risør | 1 January 1838 | 0901 Risør | Aust-Agder | |
2 | 4202 | Grimstad | 1 January 1838 | 0904 Grimstad | ||
3 | 4203 | Arendal | 1 January 1838 | 0906 Arendal | ||
4 | 4204 | Kristiansand | 1 January 1838 | 1001 Kristiansand 1017 Songdalen 1018 Søgne | Vest-Agder | |
5 | 4205 | Lindesnes | 1 January 1964 | 1002 Mandal 1021 Marnardal 1029 Lindesnes | ||
6 | 4206 | Farsund | 1 January 1838 | 1003 Farsund | ||
7 | 4207 | Flekkefjord | 1 January 1838 | 1004 Flekkefjord | ||
8 | 4211 | Gjerstad | 1 January 1838 | 0911 Gjerstad | Aust-Agder | |
9 | 4212 | Vegårshei | 1 January 1838 | 0912 Vegårshei | ||
10 | 4213 | Tvedestrand | 1 January 1838 | 0914 Tvedestrand | ||
11 | 4214 | Froland | 1 January 1850 | 0919 Froland | ||
12 | 4215 | Lillesand | 1 January 1838 | 0926 Lillesand | ||
13 | 4216 | Birkenes | 1 January 1838 | 0928 Birkenes | ||
14 | 4217 | Åmli | 1 January 1838 | 0929 Åmli | ||
15 | 4218 | Iveland | 1 January 1886 | 0935 Iveland | ||
16 | 4219 | Evje og Hornnes | 1 January 1960 | 0937 Evje og Hornnes | ||
17 | 4220 | Bygland | 1 January 1838 | 0938 Bygland | ||
18 | 4221 | Valle | 1 January 1838 | 0940 Valle | ||
19 | 4222 | Bykle | 1 January 1902 | 0941 Bykle | ||
20 | 4223 | Vennesla | 1 January 1864 | 1014 Vennesla | Vest-Agder | |
21 | 4224 | Åseral | 1 January 1838 | 1026 Åseral | ||
22 | 4225 | Lyngdal | 1 January 1838 | 1027 Audnedal 1032 Lyngdal | ||
23 | 4226 | Hægebostad | 1 January 1838 | 1034 Hægebostad | ||
24 | 4227 | Kvinesdal | 1 January 1838 | 1037 Kvinesdal | ||
25 | 4228 | Sirdal | 1 January 1849 | 1046 Sirdal |
Norway of the Viking Age was divided into petty kingdoms ruled by chiefs who contended for land, maritime supremacy, or political ascendance and sought alliances or control through marriage with other royal families, either voluntary or forced. These circumstances produced the generally turbulent and heroic lives recorded in the Heimskringla.
For example, the Ynglinga saga tells us that Harald Redbeard, chief of Agðir, refused his daughter Åsa to Gudröd Halvdanson, on which event Gudröd invaded Agðir, killed Harald and his son Gyrd, and took Åsa whether she would or no. She bore a son, Halvdan (the Black), and later arranged to have Gudröd assassinated. Among the royal families, these events seem to have been rather ordinary. Her word was the last in the argument, as her grandson, Harald Fairhair, unified Norway.
Prior to the Viking Age is a gap in the region's history for a few hundred years, but in Jordanes we also find regions of the same but earlier forms of names, presumably also petty kingdoms under now unknown chiefs. The previous most credible source, Ptolemy, gives the briefest of sketches, only citing all of Norway as the Chaedini ("country people"). Perhaps the difference between kingdoms was not sufficiently important to cite them individually.
Prior to then the most credible and respected source, Tacitus in Germania Chapter 44 described the Suiones, who were divided into civitates (kingdoms?) along the coast of Scandinavia and were unusual in owning fleets of a special type of ship. These were pointed on both ends and were driven by banks of oars that could be rearranged or shipped for river passage. They did not depend on sail (so Tacitus says) but other than that they do not differ from Viking ships. These civitates went all the way around Scandinavia to the Arctic, or at least to regions of very long days, where they stopped.
It seems clear that in the Roman Iron Age Norway was populated by people of the same identity as Sweden, who were called the Suiones by Latin sources. In settling the coast at some point in prehistory they had been divided into civitates by the terrain. These states took on mainly geographical names or names of individuals or mythological characters. Agder was one of them.
After the unification of Norway by Harold Fairhair and army and allies in the 10th century, all the civitates became provinces (fylker) and after their conversion to Christianity, they became dioceses or parishes. The development of Old Norse into local dialects and the dissimilation of customs due to isolation added an ethnic flavor to the area, which is cherished today.
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