Minister for Iceland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Cabinet of Denmark (before 1904)
- Cabinet of Denmark
- Cabinet of Iceland (after 1904)
- Copenhagen (before 1904)
- Reykjavík (after 1904)
- Constitution of Denmark (before 1904)
- Constitution of Iceland (after 1904)
| Minister for Iceland | |
|---|---|
| Ráðherra Íslands | |
| Before 1904: Ministry of Justice of Denmark | |
| Member of |
|
| Seat |
|
| Appointer | Monarch of Denmark |
| Constituting instrument |
|
| Precursor | Justice Minister of Denmark |
| Formation |
|
| First holder |
|
| Final holder |
|
| Abolished |
|
| Succession | Prime Minister of Iceland |
Minister for Iceland (Danish: Minister for Island, pronounced [miˈnistɐ fɒ ˈisˌlænˀ]; Icelandic: Ráðherra Íslands) was a post in the Danish cabinet for Icelandic affairs.
The post was established on 5 January 1874 as, according to the Constitution of Iceland, the executive power rested in the king of Denmark through the Danish cabinet. The Constitutional Act of Iceland of 3 October 1903 stated that the minister for Iceland had to be a resident of Reykjavík and be able to read and write Icelandic. The minister was responsible to the Icelandic parliament. The post of Minister for Iceland was part of the post of Justice Minister of Denmark until 1904 when Iceland obtained extended home rule.
After an agreement with the Social Liberal government in Copenhagen in January 1917, Jón Magnússon formed the first coalition government consisting of three ministers and with a majority in the Althing behind it. Parliamentarism was thus implemented in Iceland. Jón Magnússon got the title forsætisráðherra Íslands (Prime Minister of Iceland, but literally chairman or president of the ministers), while all three ministers were also formally members of the Danish cabinet each with the title Minister of Iceland.
In 1918, the Danish–Icelandic Act of Union recognised Iceland as an independent and sovereign state in a personal union with Denmark. The Kingdom of Iceland was established and the post of Minister for Iceland was closed down on 30 November 1918.
