Øvrebø og Hægeland herred | |
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Former Municipality | |
View of one of the local churches, Hægeland Church
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Location of the municipality | |
Coordinates: 58°17′26″N 07°46′39″E / 58.29056°N 7.77750°ECoordinates: 58°17′26″N 07°46′39″E / 58.29056°N 7.77750°E | |
Country | Norway |
Region | Southern Norway |
County | Vest-Agder |
District | Sørlandet |
Municipality ID | NO-1016 |
Adm. Center | Øvrebø |
Area | |
• Total | 303 km2 (117 sq mi) |
Time zone | CET (UTC+01:00) |
• Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+02:00) |
Created from | Øvrebø in 1865 |
Split into | Øvrebø and Hægeland in 1896 |
Øvrebø og Hægeland is a former municipality in Vest-Agder county, Norway. The 303-square-kilometre (117 sq mi) municipality existed from 1865 until its dissolution in 1896. It is located in the northern part of the present-day municipality of Vennesla, to the west of the Otra river. The administrative centre of the municipality was the village of Øvrebø, where Øvrebø Church is located.
The municipality of Øvrebø og Hægeland was established in 1865 when the old municipality of Øvrebø was divided into Vennesla (population: 1,103) and Øvrebø og Hægeland (population: 1,829). The municipality existed until 1 July 1896, when it was split to create two new municipalities: Øvrebø (population: 888) and Hægeland (population: 843). These two municipalities later merged into Vennesla municipality in 1964.
The municipality is a combination of the names of two parishes: Øvrebø and Hægeland. Øvrebø is named after the old Øvrebø farm (Old Norse: Øfribœr), since the first Øvrebø Church was built there. The first part of the name means "upper" and second part of the name is identical with the word bœr which means "farm" and it is cognate with the Dutch language word "boer" which means "farmer". The name therefore means "the upper farm".
Hægeland is named after the old Hægeland farm (Old Norse: Helgaland). The first element of the name means "holy" (Old Norse: heilagr and Norwegian: hellig) and the last element (Old Norse: land) is identical with the word land which means "". This area was important to ancient Norse pagan worship.