Henrik Ibsen - Ancestry

Ancestry

Ibsen's ancestry has been a much studied subject, due to his perceived foreignness and due to the influence of his biography and family on his plays. Ibsen often made references to his family in his plays, sometimes by name, or by modelling characters after them.

The oldest documented member of the Ibsen family was ship's captain Rasmus Ibsen (1632–1703) from Stege, Denmark. His son, ship's captain Peder Ibsen became a burgher of Bergen in Norway in 1726. Henrik Ibsen has Danish, German, Norwegian and some distant Scottish ancestry. Most of his ancestors belonged to the merchant class of original Danish/German extraction, and many of his ancestors were ship's captains. His biographer Henrik Jæger famously wrote in 1888 that Ibsen did not have a drop of Norwegian blood in his veins, stating that "the ancestral Ibsen was a Dane". This, however, is not completely accurate; notably through his grandmother Hedevig Paus, Ibsen was descended from one of the very few families of the patrician class of original Norwegian extraction, known since the 15th century. Ibsen's ancestors had mostly lived in Norway for several generations, even though many had foreign ancestry.

The name Ibsen is originally a patronymic, meaning "son of Ib" (Ib is a Danish variant of Jacob). The patronymic became "frozen", i.e. it became a permanent family name, already in the 17th century. The phenomenon of patronymics becoming frozen started in the 17th century in bourgeois families in Denmark, and the practice was only widely adopted in Norway from around 1900.

Ancestors of Henrik Ibsen
32. Rasmus Ibsen (1632–1703),
ship's captain in Stege, Denmark
16. Peder Rasmussen Ibsen (–1765),
ship's captain and merchant in Bergen
33. Eva Johansdatter Osterland
8. Henrik Ibsen (1726–1765),
merchant in Skien
34.
17. Birgitte Holtermann (1692–1728)
35.
4. Henrich Ibsen (1765–1797),
ship's captain and merchant in Skien
36. Anders Andersen Dishington (1675–)
18. Giert Andersen Dishington (1706–1769)
37. Wenche Giertsdatter Meyer (–1748)
9. Wenche Dishington (1738–1780)
38. Jan Forman (1662–1725)
19. Margrethe Jansen Forman
39.
2. Knud Ibsen (1797–1877),
merchant in Skien
40. Bendix Jens Plesner (1668–1708),
merchant in Kerteminde
20. Johan Glüsing Plesner (1731–1790),
merchant in Skien
41. Anna Dorthe Bager (1680–1748)
10. Knud Plesner (1731–1789),
ship's captain and merchant in Skien
42. Knud Pedersen Hind
21. Karen Cathrine Hind (1708-1778)
43.
5. Johanne Cathrine Plesner (1770–1847)
44.
22. Nicolai Kall (1709–1774),
merchant in Skien
45.
11. Maria Kall (1741–1786)
46. Engebret Bomhoff
23. Elisabeth Marie Bomhoff (1707–1784)
47. Maria Brunn (1684–)
1. Henrik Ibsen
48.
24. Jochum Altenburg (1684–1745)
49.
12. Diderik Altenburg,
manager of Ulefos Saugbrug
50.
25.
51.
6. Johan Andreas Altenburg (1763–1824),
merchant and former ship's captain in Skien
52.
26. Johan David Barth,
postmaster in Kragerø
53.
13. Marichen Johansdatter Barth
54.
27. Dorothea Ruhland
55.
3. Marichen Cornelia Martine Altenburg (1799–1869)
56. Cornelius Paulsson Paus (1662–1723),
district judge in Upper Telemark
28. Paul Paus (1697-1768),
procurator
57. Valborg Jørgensdatter Ravn (1673–1726)
14. Cornelius Paus (1726–1799),
forest inspector of Upper Telemark
58. Cristopher Fredriksen Blom (1651–1735),
forest owner
29. Martha Christophersdatter Blom
59. Johanna Margrethe Jensdatter Ørn (1671–1745)
7. Hedevig Christine Paus (1763–1848)
60.
30. Ole Falck
61.
15. Christine Falck (1723–1798)
62.
31.
63.

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