facial
The cranial nerve involved in raising the eyelids is the oculomotor nerve (cranial nerve III). For focusing the lens of the eye for accommodation, the oculomotor nerve controls the ciliary muscle.
The Facial Nerve or Cranial Nerve VII is the nerve involved with Bell's Palsy.
Occulomotor nerve (CN III) controls levator palpebrae so yes, the eyelids are controlled by cranial nerves.
The optic nerve (cranial nerve II) is not involved in taste, as its primary function is vision. Taste is primarily mediated by the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII), glossopharyngeal nerve (cranial nerve IX), and vagus nerve (cranial nerve X).
The spinal accessory nerve (cranial nerve XI) is involved in hyperextending and flexing the neck. This nerve innervates the trapezius and sternocleidomastoid muscles, which are involved in these movements.
oculomotor
Trigeminal (5th) cranial nerve
It is the 7th cranial nerve (facial nerve).
VII the cranial nerve or the Facial
number III. oculomotor
The nerves involved in diplopia include three cranial nerves: the oculomotor nerve (third cranial nerve), the abducens nerve (sixth cranial nerve), and the trochlear nerve (fourth cranial nerve).
The Vagus nerve