is the name for
Norwegian local self-government districts that were legally enacted on 1 January 1838. This system of
municipalities was created in a bill approved by the
Parliament of Norway and signed into law by King
Carl Johan on 14 January 1837. The
formannskaps law, which fulfilled an express requirement of the
Constitution of Norway, required that every
parish form a
formannsskapsdistrikt (municipality) on 1 January 1838. In this way, the parishes of the state
Church of Norway became worldly, administrative districts as well. (Although some parishes were divided into two or three municipalities.) In total, there were 396
formannsskapsdistrikts created under this law. There were different types of
formannskapsdistrikts that were created also:
History
The introduction of self-government in rural districts was a major political change. The Norwegian farm culture (
bondekultur) that emerged came to serve as a symbol of nationalistic resistance to the forced
union with Sweden. The legislation of 1837 gave both the towns and the rural areas the same institutions: a minor change for the town, but a major advance for the rural communities. The significance of this legislation is hailed by a nationalistic historian,
Ernst Sars:
- "So great an advance in relation to the political development of the people that on that account it can almost be placed alongside the Constitution. By it the free constitution was given a broad basis to rest upon and be nourished from, and became related to the daily life and activity of the people in such a way that its principles could penetrate everywhere and be most effectively acquired… There was at that time scarcely any European state where local self-government was so well organized and so widely ramified as it became in Norway through the legislation of 1837."