Folketeljinga 1910

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Dataset information

Country of origin
Updated
2019.08.26 00:00
Created
2013.03.04
Available languages
Norwegian
Keywords
folketelling, bustader, 1910, folketeljing, bosteder
Quality scoring
215

Dataset description

The 1910-teljinga as open data The National Archives, like other governmental bodies, shall publish data so that others can use them on new months and in combination with data sets from other bodies. Folketeljinga 1910 is no place for it. Ho has been available for DIFI’s national tevling Apps4Norge.no in 2013 and the Arts Council’s hackathon #hack4no in 2014. We look forward to spanning tenesters based on open, public data. Teljinga from 1910 should be an interesting boiler to work with. Arkivverket offers and data from 1910-teljinga to the project Kultur – and nature travel, which is a collaboration between the Arts Council, the Directorate for Nature Management, the Norwegian Mapping Authority and the National Archives. 330.535 bows in Norway in 1910 It bidd 2.391.782 people in Norway in 1910. Teljinga shows that there were 279,635 bustads in the countryside and 50,900 bustads in the towns. In the countryside, the huts were tied to farms — and usage numbers. There were and many households in 1910. In the towns, the arches were linked to street addresses. From the dataset you can search for and visa on a map, depending on most of the 330.535 bows and see the kven as budde there. Through a collaboration with the Arts Council of Norway and the project Culture and Nature Journey, the National Archives of Norway has started a work to map all the 330.535 arches in 1910. This is an important part of the data that the agency will offer. As of January 2014, we have put in place the coordinators for about 80 % of these bustadane by operating together today’s matricle (register of farms, use and street suits) with the information in teljinga. What we have not realised in this way, one must take on others and more manual months. Here it will and will be suitable for active efforts from local presence in the country. Teljinga in 1910 is the first boiler that we map. The Norwegian Arkivverket has very soft data that can even present itself on maps. The 1910-teljinga as open data The National Archives, like other governmental bodies, shall publish data so that others can use them on new months and in combination with data sets from other bodies. Folketeljinga 1910 is no place for it. Ho has been available for DIFI’s national tevling Apps4Norge.no in 2013 and the Arts Council’s hackathon #hack4no in 2014. We look forward to spanning tenesters based on open, public data. Teljinga from 1910 should be an interesting boiler to work with. Arkivverket offers and data from 1910-teljinga to the project Kultur – and nature travel, which is a collaboration between the Arts Council, the Directorate for Nature Management, the Norwegian Mapping Authority and the National Archives. 330.535 bows in Norway in 1910 It bidd 2.391.782 people in Norway in 1910. Teljinga shows that there were 279,635 bustads in the countryside and 50,900 bustads in the towns. In the countryside, the huts were tied to farms — and usage numbers. There were and many households in 1910. In the towns, the arches were linked to street addresses. From the dataset you can search for and visa on a map, depending on most of the 330.535 bows and see the kven as budde there. Through a collaboration with the Arts Council of Norway and the project Culture and Nature Journey, the National Archives of Norway has started a work to map all the 330.535 arches in 1910. This is an important part of the data that the agency will offer. As of January 2014, we have put in place the coordinators for about 80 % of these bustadane by operating together today’s matricle (register of farms, use and street suits) with the information in teljinga. What we have not realised in this way, one must take on others and more manual months. Here it will and will be suitable for active efforts from local presence in the country. Teljinga in 1910 is the first boiler that we map. The Norwegian Arkivverket has very soft data that can even present itself on maps. The 1910-teljinga as open data The National Archives, like other governmental bodies, shall publish data so that others can use them on new months and in combination with data sets from other bodies. Folketeljinga 1910 is no place for it. Ho has been available for DIFI’s national tevling Apps4Norge.no in 2013 and the Arts Council’s hackathon #hack4no in 2014. We look forward to spanning tenesters based on open, public data. Teljinga from 1910 should be an interesting boiler to work with. Arkivverket offers and data from 1910-teljinga to the project Kultur – and nature travel, which is a collaboration between the Arts Council, the Directorate for Nature Management, the Norwegian Mapping Authority and the National Archives. 330.535 bows in Norway in 1910 It bidd 2.391.782 people in Norway in 1910. Teljinga shows that there were 279,635 bustads in the countryside and 50,900 bustads in the towns. In the countryside, the huts were tied to farms — and usage numbers. There were and many households in 1910. In the towns, the arches were linked to street addresses. From the dataset you can search for and visa on a map, depending on most of the 330.535 bows and see the kven as budde there. Through a collaboration with the Arts Council of Norway and the project Culture and Nature Journey, the National Archives of Norway has started a work to map all the 330.535 arches in 1910. This is an important part of the data that the agency will offer. As of January 2014, we have put in place the coordinators for about 80 % of these bustadane by operating together today’s matricle (register of farms, use and street suits) with the information in teljinga. What we have not realised in this way, one must take on others and more manual months. Here it will and will be suitable for active efforts from local presence in the country. Teljinga in 1910 is the first boiler that we map. The Norwegian Arkivverket has very soft data that can even present itself on maps.
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