Elections for the Constituent Assembly were held in Denmark on 5 October 1848. [1] Of the 158 seats in the Assembly, 114 were elected and 44 appointed by the King (of which 38 were from Denmark proper, five from Iceland and one from the Faroe Islands). [2] An additional 31 candidates were to come from the Duchy of Schleswig but were not elected due to the First Schleswig War. [3]
1848 had seen a series of revolutions across Europe. An insurrection in Holstein together with the political mobilisation of the National Liberal Party in Copenhagen led to the new king Frederick VII installing a new cabinet including National Liberal members. [4] It was hoped that a cabinet with popular support would allow it to fight the insurrection and draw up a "free constitution" which would change the system of government from an absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy. [4] Following discussions, it was decided to hold elections for a Constituent Assembly. [4]
There were only elections in 85 constituencies, as candidates were returned unopposed in the remainder. Together with the royal appointees, right-wing candidates emerged as the largest group with 52–54 seats. Left-wing candidates (congregating around the Society of the Friends of Peasants) won 45–47 seats, centrists 42–44 and others 13–19. [2] A total of 51,775 votes were cast in the constituencies where elections were held, giving a turnout of 79.7%. [2]
The Assembly convened between October 1848 and May 1849. A new constitution was passed in May and signed by the King on 5 June. [2] The new constitution created a bicameral parliament with a directly elected lower house and an indirectly elected upper house. [2] Elections for the two houses were held in December. [1]
The prime minister of Denmark is the head of government in the Kingdom of Denmark comprising the three constituent countries: Denmark, Greenland and the Faroe Islands. Before the creation of the modern office, the kingdom did not initially have a head of government separate from its head of state, namely the monarch, in whom the executive authority was vested. The Constitution of 1849 established a constitutional monarchy by limiting the powers of the monarch and creating the office of premierminister. The inaugural holder of the office was Adam Wilhelm Moltke.
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