Hagerup's Second Cabinet
Appearance
(Redirected from Second cabinet Hagerup)
Hagerup's Second Cabinet | |
---|---|
Cabinet of Norway | |
Date formed | 22 October 1903 |
Date dissolved | 11 March 1905 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Oscar II of Sweden |
Head of government | Francis Hagerup |
No. of ministers | 11 |
Member party | Conservative Party Coalition Party Liberal Party |
Status in legislature | Coalition Majority government 100 / 117 (85.47%)
|
History | |
Election | 1903 |
Legislature term | 1903–1905 |
Predecessor | Blehr's First Cabinet |
Successor | Michelsen's Cabinet |
The Hagerup's Second Cabinet governed Norway between 22 October 1903 and 11 March 1905. It fell as the cabinet ministers collectively resigned on 28 February and 1 March 1905, as part of the build-up for the dissolution of the union between Norway and Sweden in 1905. Christian Michelsen withdrew his application, and could form the cabinet Michelsen. It had the following composition:
Cabinet members
[edit]Portfolio | Minister | Took office | Left office | Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister Minister of Justice | 22 October 1903 | 11 March 1905 | Conservative | ||
Prime Minister in Stockholm | 22 October 1903 | 11 March 1905 | Liberal | ||
Minister of Finance and Customs | 22 October 1903 | 1 September 1904 | Liberal | ||
1 September 1904 | 11 March 1905 | Coalition | |||
Minister of Auditing | 22 October 1903 | 1 September 1904 | Liberal | ||
1 September 1904 | 11 March 1905 | Liberal | |||
Minister of Defence | 22 October 1903 | 11 March 1905 | Coalition | ||
Minister of Agriculture | 22 October 1903 | 26 September 1904 | Conservative | ||
26 September 1904 | 11 March 1905 | Conservative | |||
Minister of Education and Church Affairs | 22 October 1903 | 11 March 1905 | Conservative | ||
Minister of Trade | 22 October 1903 | 1 September 1904 | Liberal | ||
1 September 1904 | 11 March 1905 | Conservative | |||
Minister of Labour | 22 October 1903 | 11 March 1905 | Conservative | ||
Members of the Council of State Division in Stockholm | 22 October 1903 | 1 September 1904 | Coalition | ||
22 October 1903 | 1 September 1904 | Conservative | |||
1 September 1904 | 11 March 1905 | Liberal | |||
1 September 1904 | 11 March 1905 | Liberal |
State Secretary
[edit]Not to be confused with the modern title State Secretary. The old title State Secretary, used between 1814 and 1925, is now known as Secretary to the Government (Regjeringsråd).[2]
References
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Unless otherwise noted, the period was 22 October 1903 - 11 March 1905
- ^ Secretary to the Council of State since 1814 - Government.no