Footnote 811: See p. [589].[(Back)]
Footnote 812: Art. 112. Dodd, Modern Constitutions, II., 143. An English version of the Norwegian constitution is printed in Dodd, ibid., II., 123-143, and in H. L. Braekstad, The Constitution of the Kingdom of Norway (London, 1905). The standard treatise on the Norwegian system of government is T. H. Aschehoug, Norges Nuvaerende Statsforfatning (2d ed., Christiania, 1891-1893); but a more available work is an earlier one by the same author, Das Staatsrecht der vereinigten Königreiche Schweden und Norwegen (Freiburg, 1886), in Marquardsen's Handbuch. The most recent and, on the whole the most useful, treatise is B. Morgenstierne, Das Staatsrecht des Königreichs Norwegen (Tübingen, 1911).[(Back)]
Footnote 813: Art. 30. Dodd, Modern Constitutions, II., 128.[(Back)]
Footnote 814: Arts. 16, 17, 20-26. Dodd, Modern Constitutions, II., 125-127.[(Back)]
Footnote 815: At the election of 1909 the total number of parliamentary electors was 785,358. The number of votes recorded, however, was but 487,193.[(Back)]
Footnote 816: Arts. 59-64. Dodd, Modern Constitutions, II., 134-135.[(Back)]
Footnote 817: Art. 75. Ibid., II., 136.[(Back)]
Footnote 818: Art. 79. Dodd, Modern Constitutions, II., 137-138.[(Back)]
Footnote 819: Son of the earlier premier, Frederick Stang.[(Back)]
Footnote 820: A brief account of Norwegian political parties to 1900 will be found in Lavisse et Rambaud, Histoire Générale, XII., 266-274; to 1906, in Cambridge Modern History, XII., 280-290. For additional references see pp. [578-579].[(Back)]