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  1. Nygaardsvold was born in Hommelvik, the main centre of the municipality of Malvik in the county of Sør-Trøndelag, Norway. His parents were Anders Nygaardsvold (1839–1897) and Andrea Ratvold (1845–1929). His father was a tenant farmer and a founding member of the first labour union in the area. Johan took his first job as a lumber mill ...

  2. Johan Nygaardsvold (1879–1952) var en norsk politiker , parlamentarisk leder for Arbeiderpartiets stortingsgruppe 1932–1935 og Norges statsminister 1935–1945. Han dannet den andre norske regjering med basis i Arbeiderpartiet 20. mars 1935, etter at partiet hadde inngått det såkalte kriseforliket med Bondepartiet .

  3. Johan Nygaardsvold var ein norsk politikar frå Arbeidarpartiet, stortingsrepresentant i over 30 år og statsminister frå 20. mars 1935 til 25. juni 1945. Som reformpolitikar før andre verdskrigen og som regjeringssjef ved krigsutbrotet i 1940 er Nygaardsvold sitt ettermæle todelt.

    • Harald Berntsen
  4. Learn about the life and career of Johan Nygaardsvold, a former industrial worker and politician who led the Labour Party and the Government during the Second World War. Find out how he fought for social reforms, agricultural prices, and Norway's independence from Nazi Germany.

  5. Johan Nygaardsvold’s Government was appointed by King Haakon VII in a session of the Council of State on 19 March 1935, effective as of 20 March 1935 at 12 noon. It succeded Johan Mowinckel’s Third Government, after an economic agreement had been made in the Storting between the Labour Party and the Farmers’ Party.

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  7. Apr 22, 2024 · According to royal decree of 8 May 1945, Norway’s central administration was now organised as shown below when Johan Nygaardsvold's Government on 14 May 1945 returned to Oslo after its exile in London during the Second World War: Unchanged from the secretariat the Prime Minister had in Oslo 2 October 1939-9 April 1940.

  8. Jun 16, 2020 · Introduction. Two months after the German attack on Norway began 9 April 1940, Prime Minister Johan Nygaardsvold (1879–1952) and his cabinet escaped to London, where they remained for the duration of the occupation, officially recognized as Norway’s representative government by the Allies and most of the neutral states.