2013 in Norway
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Events in the year 2013 in Norway.
Incumbents
- Monarch – Harald V
- President of the Storting – Dag Terje Andersen (Labour) until 9 October, then Olemic Thommessen (Conservative) from 16 October
- Prime Minister – Jens Stoltenberg (Labour until 16 October, then Erna Solberg (Conservative from 16 October
Events
January
- 16–19 January – Five Norwegians died in the In Amenas hostage crisis.
- 17 January – A lorry full of highly-flammable goat-whey cheese, brunost, caught fire in a road tunnel near Kjøpsvik in Tysfjord Municipality. The high fat and sugar content kept the conflagration burning for four days and the tunnel was impassable and badly damaged.[1][2]
February
- 19 February – The Standing Committee on Scrutiny and Constitutional Affairs unanimously criticised Stoltenberg's Cabinet for lack of security arrangement before the 2011 Norway attacks.[3]
March
April
May
- 6 May – Gerd Kristiansen was elected leader of the Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions[3]
- 28 May – Oslo city council decided to build a new Munch Museum in Bjørvika.[3]
June
July
- 1 July – It was announced that the Södra Cell Tofte pulp mill will close.[3]
- 17 July – Marte Dalelv was convicted for extramarital sex and perjury after having reported a man to the police in Dubai for rape. She was later pardoned.[3]
August
- 5 August – A female employee at the Labour and Welfare Service in Oslo was stabbed at work and died five days later.[3]
- 17 August – The Hardanger Bridge was opened.
September
- 9 September – In the 2013 Norwegian parliamentary election the non-socialist parties won a plurality. The Green Party gained a representative in parliament for the first time.
- 9 September – Fifty-five percent of voters in Oslo voted in favour of the Oslo bid for the 2022 Winter Olympics.
- 30 September – After negotiations, the Conservative Party and the Progress Party agreed to form a new cabinet while the Liberal Party and Christian Democratic Party agreed to support the cabinet in Parliament.[4]
October
- 7 October – The Conservative and Progress parties presented a political platform for Solberg's Cabinet.
- 9 October – Olemic Thommessen formally becomes the new President of the Storting.[5]
- 16 October – Erna Solberg became as prime minister at her cabinet; the Progress party were represented in government for the first time following the 2013 parliamentary elections and Stoltenberg's lost the election.
- 23 October – The Supreme Court ruled that a time limit of 25 years for individual fishing quotas does not violate the Constitution of Norway.[3]
November
- 4 November – Three people died in a hijacking of the Valdresekspressen bus service.
- 16 November – Cyclone Hilde struck Trøndelag and Helgeland.
December
- 3 December – PISA 2012 showed Norwegian pupils scoring below average in mathematics, and generally worse than in 2009.[3]
- 5 December – Seven pioneer divers in the North sea won a case against Norway in the European Court of Human Rights for financial compensation for injuries.[6]
- 10 December – The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons was awarded the 2013 Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo.
- 10 December – Joshua French was indicted for the murder of Tjostolv Moland.[3]
- 12 December – Hurricane Ivar struck Central Norway; 53,000 households lost electricity.[3]
- 24 December – A storm struck many areas of the country on Christmas Eve.[3]
Sports and popular culture
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Chess
- 1 April: Magnus Carlsen won the 2013 Candidate tournament in Chess and became the challenger to Viswanathan Anand in the World Chess Championship in November 2013.
- 11 August – 2 September – The Chess World Cup 2013 was hosted in Tromsø.
- 9–22 November – Carlsen won the 2013 World Chess Championship match 6½–3½ against Anand, thus becoming the new world chess champion.
Music
- Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 2013
- 13 August – Erlend Skomsvoll was recipient of the Ella-prisen 2013 at the Oslo Jazzfestival.[7]
- "The Fox (What Does the Fox Say?)", an electronic dance song and viral video by the comedy duo Ylvis, was the top trending video of 2013 on YouTube.[8][9]
- 9 October – Ylvis performs their viral hit "The Fox (What Does the Fox Say?)" on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon.
Television
- 10 May - Siri Vølstad Jensen wins the seventh series of Idol.
- 23 November - Singer and runner up of the seventh series of Idol Eirik Søfteland and his partner Nadya Khamitskaya win the ninth series of Skal vi danse?.
- 13 December - Knut Marius wins the second season of The Voice – Norges beste stemme.
Anniversaries
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- 23 January – 200 years since the birth of Camilla Collett
- 11 June – 100 years since general suffrage for women in Norway[10]
- 5 August – 200 years since the birth of Ivar Aasen
- 12 December – 150 years since the birth of Edvard Munch.
Notable deaths
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- 2 January – Dag Lyseid, footballer and politician (b. 1954)[11][12]
- 3 January – Preben Munthe, economist (b. 1922)[13]
- 3 January – Lars T. Bjella, politician (b. 1922)[14]
- 4 January – Petter Fauchald, footballer (b. 1930)[15]
- 4 January – Nilmar Janbu, engineer (b. 1921)[16]
- 5 January – Trygve Goa, printmaker (b. 1925)[17]
- 7 January – Helge B. Andresen, businessperson (b. 1935)[18][19]
- 7 January – Birck Elgaaen, equestrian (b. 1917)[20]
- 8 January – Asbjørn Aarnes, literary historian (b. 1923)[21]
- 8 January – Ole A. Sæther, entomologist (b. 1936)
- 14 January – Morten Mølster, guitarist (b. 1962)
- 18 January – Borghild Niskin, alpine skier (b. 1924)[22]
- 18 January – Svein Magnus Håvarstein, sculptor (b. 1942)[23]
- 19 January – Viggo Hagstrøm, legal scholar (b. 1954)[24]
- 25 January – Aase Nordmo Løvberg, opera singer (b. 1923)[25]
- 25 January – Arne Berg, ice hockey player (b. 1931)[26]
- 26 January – Egon Weng, dancer and ballet coach (b. 1924)[27]
- 28 January – John Tandrevold, boxer (b. 1927)[28]
- 1 February – Dag Schjelderup-Ebbe, musicologist (b. 1926)[29]
- 2 February – Tarjei Rygnestad, physician (b. 1954)[30][31]
- 3 February – Reidar Hugsted, engineer (b. 1931)[32]
- 3 February – Kåre Syrstad, agrarian leader (b. 1939)[33]
- 5 February – Egil Hovland, composer (b. 1924)[34]
- 7 February – Nic Knudtzon, engineer (b. 1922)[35]
- 7 February – Per Tomter, mathematician (b. 1939)[36]
- 8 February – Knut Nesbø, musician, footballer and journalist (b. 1961)
- 9 February – Kåre Valebrokk, media executive (b. 1940)[37]
- 11 February – Tore Hansen, singer (b. 1949)[38]
- 11 February – Villy Andresen, footballer (b. 1925)[39]
- 12 February – Bård Henriksen, speed skater (b. 1945)[40]
- 13 February – Per Blom, film director (b. 1946)[41]
- 16 February – Jan Dahm, resistance member (b. 1921)[42]
- 19 February – Eva Bergh, actress (b. 1926)[43]
- 20 February – Oddbjørn Hågård, politician (b. 1940)[44]
- 1 March – Margaret Johansen, novelist (b. 1923)[45]
- 2 March – Niels Hertzberg, sports official (b. )[46]
- 2 March – Bjørn Skau, politician (b. 1929)[47]
- 11 March – Harald Peterssen, painter (b. 1916)[48]
- 16 March – Trond Brænne, actor (b. 1953)[49]
- 16 March – Georg Rajka, dermatologist (born 1925)[50]
- 17 March – Svein Blindheim, military officer (b. 1916)[51]
- 18 March – Eivind Rølles, guitarist (b. 1959)
- 19 March – Eyvind Fjeld Halvorsen, philologist (b. 1922)[52]
- 23 March – Aloysius Valente, dancer (b. 1926)[53]
- 24 March – Inge Lønning, theologian and politician (b. 1938)[54]
- 24 March – Jo Inge Bjørnebye, ski jumper (b. 1946)[55]
- 25 March – Ellen Einan, poet (b. 1931)[56]
- 27 March – Hjalmar Andersen, speed skater (b. 1923)[57]
- 1 April – Eskild Jensen, civil servant (b. 1925)[58]
- 2 April – Johnny Lunde, alpine skier (b. 1923)[59]
- 3 April – Jul Haganæs, poet (b. 1932)[60]
- 3 April – Kiki Byrne, fashion designer (b. 1937, died in the UK)[61]
- 13 April – Hilmar Myhra, ski jumper (b. 1915)[62]
- 17 April – Yngve Moe, musician (b. 1957)[63]
- 18 April – Jon Åker, hospital director (b. 1927)[64]
- 21 April – Bjarne Sandemose, inventor (b. 1924)[65]
- 21 April – Sigurd G. Helle, topographer (b. 1920)[66]
- 21 April – Ludvig Johan Bakkevig, missionary (b. 1921)[67][68]
- 23 April – Tor Traheim, ship-owner (b. 1925)[69]
- 25 April – Tor Waaler, pharmacologist (b. 1927)[70]
- 28 April – Carl M. Rynning-Tønnesen, police chief (b. 1924)[71]
- 29 April – Erling Løseth, politician (b. 1927)[72]
- 29 April – Ole K. Sara, politician (b. 1936)[73]
- 29 April – Gunvor Stornes, writer (b. 1924)[74]
- 3 May – Thor Andreassen, trade unionist (b. 1927)[75]
- 4 May – Annok Sarri Nordrå, writer (b. 1931)[76]
- 5 May – Leif Preus, photographer (b. 1928)[77]
- 5 May – Arne Ratchje, aquaculturist (b. 1916)[78][79]
- 5 May – Tore Magnussen, boxer (b. 1938)[80]
- 10 May – Per Maurseth, historian (b. 1932)[81]
- 10 May – Jan H. Jensen, pulp writer (b. 1944, died in the Philippines)[82]
- 12 May – Olaf B. Bjørnstad, ski jumper (b. 1931)[83]
- 12 May – Helga Syrrist, politician and activist (b. 1921)[84]
- 16 May – Kristen Kyrre Bremer, bishop (b. 1925)[85]
- 17 May – Otto Julius Rosenkrantz Kloumann, officer and physician (b. 1916)[86]
- 18 May – Jo Benkow, politician (b. 1924)[87]
- 19 May – Anders Vangen, opera singer (b. 1960)[88]
- 25 May – Jan Kinder, ice hockey player (b. 1944)[89]
- 25 May – Erling Welle-Strand, resistance member (b. 1916)[90]
- 1 June – Atle Kittang, literary historian (b. 1941)[91]
- 1 June – Arnvid Førde, politician (b. 1919)[92]
- 2 June – Sverre Magelssen, YMCA leader (b. 1918)[93][94]
- 8 June – Per Edvard Danielsen, naval officer (b. 1918)[95][96]
- 9 June – Leif Karl Lundesgaard, military officer (b. 1922)[97]
- 13 June – Olav Sigurd Carlsen, politician (b. 1930)[98]
- 16 June – Tore O. Vorren, geologist (b. 1944)[99]
- 20 June – Per Ung, sculptor (b. 1933)[100]
- 29 June – Jørgen Sønstebø, politician (b. 1922)[101]
- 1 July – Rolf Nordhagen, physicist (b. 1927)[102]
- 1 July – Rolf Graf, musician (b. 1960)
- 5 July – Tor Holtan-Hartwig, politician (b. 1927)[103]
- 7 July – Ingebjørg Wærstad, politician (b. 1926)[104]
- 9 July – Johannes Østtveit, politician (b. 1927)[105]
- 13 July – Mona Røkke, politician (b. 1940)[106]
- 15 July – Terje Mørkved, footballer and speed skater (b. 1949)[107]
- 15 July – Doris Jørns, writer (b. 1915)[108]
- 16 July – Torbjørn Falkanger, ski jumper (b. 1927)[109]
- 18 July – Ivar P. Enge, radiologist (b. 1922)[110]
- 18 July – Kåre Lunden, historian (b. 1930)[111]
- 18 July – Mary Eide, politician (b. 1940)[112]
- 19 July – Niclas Gulbrandsen, artist (b. 1930)[113][114]
- 24 July – Arne Eriksen, footballer (b. 1918)[115][116]
- 29 July – Ole Henrik Moe, museum director (b. 1920)[117]
- 1 August – Arild Borgen, novelist (b. 1932).[118]
- 2 August – Ola Enstad, sculptor (b. 1942)[119]
- 6 August – Flora McDonald Hartveit, professor of medicine (b. 1931)[120]
- 9 August – Kristian Smidt, literary historian (b. 1916)[121]
- 17 August – Kjell Lund, architect (b. 1927)[122][123]
- 17 August – Alf Magne Austad, painter (b. 1946)[124]
- 18 August – Tjostolv Moland, mercenary (b. 1981, died in DR Congo)[125]
- 18 August – Rolv Wesenlund, comedian (b. 1936)[126]
- 21 August – Olav Hagen, cross-country skier (b. 1921)[127]
- 23 August – Kåre Kvilhaug, architect (b. 1925)[128]
- 24 August – Alf Kaartvedt, historian (b. 1921)[129]
- 27 August – Lucy Smith, law professor (b. 1934)[130]
- 27 August – Magnhild Holmberg, politician (b. 1943)[131]
- 29 August – Are Vesterlid, architect (b. 1921)[132][133]
- 29 August – Trond Kristoffersen, businessperson (b. 1956)[134][135]
- 30 August – Oddvar Vormeland, educationalist (b. 1924)[136]
- 4 September – Inge Paulsen, footballer (b. 1923)[137][138]
- 8 September – Tore Sinding-Larsen, judge (b. 1929)[139]
- 9 September – Gunnar Høst Sjøwall, tennis player (b. 1929)[140]
- 14 September – Amund Venger, politician (b. 1943)[141]
- 16 September – Odd Nordhaug, sociologist (b. 1953)[142]
- 17 September – Alex Naumik, rock and pop singer (b. 1949)[143]
- 18 September – Torleiv Anda, diplomat (b. 1921)[144]
- 19 September – Sven Josef Cyvin, chemist (b. 1931)[145]
- 19 September – Øystein Fischer, physicist (b. 1942)[146]
- 21 September – Albert Assev, family therapist (b. 1922)[147]
- 22 September – Hassan Abdi Dhuhulow, terrorist (b. 1990)[148]
- 23 September – Eivinn Berg, diplomat (b. 1931)[149]
- 23 September – Kirsten Sørlie, theatre instructor (b. 1926)[150]
- 24 September – Sverre Bruland, conductor (b. 1923)[151]
- 24 September – Frank Stubb Micaelsen, poet and novelist (b. 1947).[152]
- 25 September – Hans Guttorm, politician (b. 1927)[153]
- 26 September – Arnstein Johansen, accordionist (b. 1925)[154]
- 26 September – Helge Solvang, politician (b. 1913)[155]
- 1 October – Ole Danbolt Mjøs, physician and politician (b. 1939)[156]
- 1 October – Bjørn Randby, handballer and businessperson (b. 1931)[157]
- 2 October – Kaare Ørnung, pianist (b. 1931)[158]
- 11 October – Rolf Wembstad, footballer (b. 1927)[159][160]
- 11 October – Olaf Heitkøtter, nature writer (b. 1928)[161][162]
- 12 October – Hans Wilhelm Longva, diplomat (b. 1942)[163]
- 18 October – Ola Syrstad, agriculturalist (b. 1922)[164][165]
- 19 October – Lage Fosheim, musician (b. 1958)
- 21 October – Karen Sogn, politician (b. 1931)[166]
- 22 October – Jo Filseth, businessperson (b. 1937)[167]
- 23 October – Bjørn Christoffersen, rower (b. 1926)[168]
- 25 October – Dan Laksov, mathematician (b. 1940)[169]
- 25 October – Arne Johansen, speed skater (b. 1927)[170]
- 28 October – Trygve Kornelius Fjetland, businessperson (b. 1926)[171]
- 2 November – Målfrid Grude Flekkøy, Children Ombudsman (b. 1936)[172]
- 2 November – Brita Borge, politician (b. 1931)[173]
- 4 November – Håkon Barfod, yacht racer (b. 1926)[174]
- 4 November – Astri Jacobsen, actress (b. 1922)[175]
- 6 November – Arvid Johanson, politician (b. 1929)[176]
- 7 November – Gunnar Hjeltnes, alpine skier (b. 1922)[177]
- 9 November – Helen Aareskjold, blind people's activist (b. 1938)[178]
- 9 November – Grethe Rytter Hasle, planktologist (b. 1920)[179]
- 9 November – Per Olsen, cross-country skier (b. 1932)[180]
- 11 November – Stein Grieg Halvorsen, actor (b. 1909)[181]
- 12 November – Erik Augestad, handballer (b. 1951)[182]
- 12 November – Tore Lindseth, footballer (b. 1948)[183]
- 16 November – Arne Pedersen, footballer (b. 1931)[184]
- 16 November – Erik Loe, editor (b. 1920)[185]
- 16 November – Tor Schaug-Pettersen, physicist (b. 1928)[186][187]
- 18 November – Knut Tøraasen, diplomat (b. 1938)[188]
- 18 November – Edgar Falch, footballer (b. 1930)[189][190]
- 21 November – Fred Kavli, entrepreneur (b. 1927, died in the US)[191]
- 23 November – Solveig Muren Sanden, illustrator (b. 1918)[192]
- 28 November – Elisabet Fidjestøl, politician (b. 1922)[193]
- 3 December – Anne Lorentzen, singer and media researcher (b. 1963)[194]
- 15 December – Frank Meidell Falch, cultural director (b. 1920)[195][196]
- 15 December – Viking Mestad, jurist (b. 1930)[197]
- 19 December – Hans Kvalbein, theologian (b. 1942)
- 21 December – Egil Storeide, painter and film set decorator (b. 1940)[198][199]
- 22 December – David Kvebæk, family therapist (b. 1933)[200]
- 22 December – Frank Bjerkholt, writer (b. 1927)[201]
- 23 December – Bjarne Kortsen, musicologist (b. 1930)[202]
- 24 December – Jakob Sigurd Holmgard, politician (b. 1929)[203]
- 27 December – Gunn Olsen, politician (b. 1952)[204]
- 30 December – Haakon Sandberg, film director and producer (b. 1924)[205]
- Full date missing
- Helge Andersen, author and playwright
- Elisabeth Thams, translator and novelist[206]
- Kurt Valner, songwriter
See also
References
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