*** Welcome to piglix ***

Ostfold

Østfold fylke
County
Rødenes in late-June 2006
Rødenes in late-June 2006
Coat of arms of Østfold fylke
Coat of arms
Østfold within Norway
Østfold within Norway
Country Norway
County Østfold
Region Østlandet
County ID NO-01
Administrative centre Sarpsborg
Government
 • Governor Anne Enger
  Senterpartiet
  (2003–present)
 • County mayor Ole Haabeth
  Arbeiderpartiet
  (2007–present)
Area
 • Total 4,180.7 km2 (1,614.2 sq mi)
 • Land 3,887 km2 (1,501 sq mi)
Area rank #17 in Norway, 1.28% of Norway's land area
Population (2014)
 • Total 284,962
 • Rank 6 (5.61% of country)
 • Density 68/km2 (180/sq mi)
 • Change (10 years) 7.5 %
Demonym(s) Østfolding
Time zone CET (UTC+01)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+02)
Official language form Bokmål
Income (per capita) 138,600 NOK
GDP (per capita) 200,084 NOK (2001)
GDP national rank 8 (3.30% of country)
Website www.ostfold-f.kommune.no
Data from Statistics Norway
Number of minorities (1st and 2nd gen.)
in Østfold by country of origin in 2017
Nationality Population (2017)
 Poland 6,711
 Iraq 4,470
 Somalia 3,068
 Kosovo 2,695
 Sweden 2,620
 Bosnia-Herzegovina 2,372
 Vietnam 1,889
 Lithuania 1,822
 Syria 1,334
 Denmark 1,291
 Iran 1,270
 Pakistan 1,188
 Philippines 1,008
 Thailand 992
 Germany 967
 Russia 879
 Turkey 829
 Afghanistan 816
 Iceland 579
 United Kingdom 494

Østfold [²østfɔl] (About this sound listen) is a county in southeastern Norway, bordering Akershus and southwestern Sweden (Västra Götaland County and Värmland), while Buskerud and Vestfold are on the other side of Oslofjord. The county's administrative seat is Sarpsborg.

Many manufacturing facilities are situated here, such as the world's most advanced biorefinery, Borregaard in Sarpsborg. Fredrikstad has shipyards. There are granite mines in Østfold and stone from these were used by Gustav Vigeland.

The county slogan is "The heartland of Scandinavia". The local dialect is characterized by its geographical proximity to Sweden.

The old name of the Oslofjord was Fold; Østfold means 'the region east of the Fold' (see also Vestfold). The name was first recorded in 1543; in the Middle Ages the name of the county was Borgarsysla 'the county/sýsla of the city Borg (now Sarpsborg)'. Later, when Norway was under Danish rule, the Danish king divided the area into many baronies. These were merged into one county (amt) in 1662 - and it was then named Smaalenenes Amt 'the amt consisting of small len'. The name was changed back to Østfold in 1919.


...
Wikipedia

...