Ibsen (family)

Playwright Henrik Ibsen

Ibsen is a Norwegian family of Danish extraction. Its most famous members are playwright Henrik Ibsen, his son, statesman Sigurd Ibsen, and grandson, pioneer film director Tancred Ibsen. Several other family members have been noted artists.

History

Prime Minister Sigurd Ibsen

The name Ibsen is a "frozen" patronymic, meaning "son of Ib." Ib is a Danish variant of Jacob. The name became frozen in the 17th century, while this practice was only widely adopted in Denmark in the 19th century and in Norway from around 1900. The phenomenon of patronymics becoming frozen started in the 17th century in bourgeois families in Denmark.

The family's earliest known ancestor is Rasmus Ibsen (1632–1703), a merchant in Stege, Denmark. Rasmus Ibsen's son, ship's captain and merchant Peter Ibsen (died 1765), settled in Norway as a burgher of Bergen. Peter's son Henrik Ibsen (1726–1765) became a ship's captain in Bergen. After his father died early and his mother Wenche Dishington remarried, Henrik's son Henrik Johan Ibsen (1765–1797) grew up in the household of parish priest Jacob von der Lippe, his stepfather. After Henrik Johan Ibsen, a ship's captain and merchant in Skien, died at sea outside Hesnes, his widow Johanne Plesner remarried to ship's captain Ole Paus, and their son Knud Ibsen grew up in the Paus household at Rising in Gjerpen. Knud Ibsen had several half siblings, among them judge and Member of Parliament Christian Cornelius Paus and banker and shipowner Christopher Blom Paus. Knud Ibsen married the niece of his stepfather, Marichen Altenburg (a daughter of shipowner Johan Andreas Altenburg and Hedevig Christine Paus), and became a prominent merchant in Skien. Knud and Marichen Ibsen were the parents of playwright Henrik Ibsen (married to Suzannah Thoresen), who in turn was the father of Prime Minister Sigurd Ibsen (married to Bergliot Bjørnson, the only daughter of Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson) and grandfather of film director Tancred Ibsen (married to Lillebil Krohn), novelist Irene Ibsen Bille (married to Josias Bille) and Eleonora Ibsen. Tancred's only child was diplomat Tancred Ibsen Jr.

The Ibsen family is becoming extinct (in the male line); the last living members (by birth) are Tancred Ibsen Jr.'s two daughters Nora and Hedda Ibsen. There are however a number of descendants of the family through female lines, namely descendants of Hedvig Ibsen (married Stousland), Irene Ibsen (married Bille), Nora Ibsen and Hedda Ibsen.

The Ibsen family in theatre

Marichen Altenburg (married Ibsen), far right, with parents and relatives

Henrik Ibsen's ancestry has been a much studied subject, due to his perceived foreignness[1] (leading his biographer Henrik Jæger to famously state that "the ancestral Ibsen was a Dane")[2] 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. Hence, both of Eric's parents, Knud Ibsen and Marichen Ibsen, served as the models for various characters, a fact admitted by Henrik Ibsen. "Jon Gynt" in Peer Gynt, "Old Ekdahl" in The Wild Duck and Daniel Hejre in The League of Youth are widely considered to be based on Knud Ibsen. Marichen Ibsen is considered the model for "Åse" in Peer Gynt and "Inga of Varteig" in The Pretenders, and she would "echo through her son's work in unremitting portrayals of suffering women."[3] More broadly, Ibsen used his own biography, relatives and ancestors as a background for his plays and characters. The Gynt family's prosperous ancestor, Rasmus Gynt, is probably named for Rasmus Ibsen, the oldest known Ibsen, and modelled after Ibsen's wealthy maternal grandfather, Johan Andreas Altenburg. Ibsen's great-aunt Kristine Cathrine Ploug (née Altenburg), who lived with the Ibsen family, served as the model for characters such as "The Rat-Wife" in Little Eyolf. The character "Hedvig" in The Wild Duck is named for Ibsen's sister Hedvig Ibsen and/or his grandmother Hedevig Paus. Ibsen's plays often take place in bourgeois circles in small towns reminiscent of Skien, resembling the social environment of his childhood.

Members

Stege, Denmark
Film director Tancred Ibsen
Hedvig Ibsen
Ibsen-Bjørnson-Paus family
Ole Paus
1766-1855
Johanne Plesner
1770-1847
Henrik Johan Ibsen
1765-1797
Hedevig Christine Paus
1763-1848
Johan Andreas Altenburg
1763-1824
Henrik Johan Paus
1799-1893
Christian Cornelius Paus
1800-1879
Christopher Blom Paus
1810-1898
Knud Ibsen
1797-1877
Marichen Altenburg
1799-1869
Hans Conrad Thoresen
1802-1858
Magdalene Kragh
1819-1903
Peder Bjørnson
1798-1871
Johan Altenborg Paus
1833-1894
Ole Paus
1846-1931
Hedvig Ibsen
1831-1920
Henrik Ibsen
1828-1906
Suzannah Thoresen
1836-1914
Karoline Reimers
1835-1834
Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson
1832-1910
Petter Elias Bjørnson
f. 1838
Christopher de Paus
1862-1943
Otto von Munthe
1871-1945
Martha Marie Paus
f. 1876
Christopher Blom Paus
1878-1959
Thorleif Paus
1881-1976
Carl Stousland
1860-1941
Sigurd Ibsen
1859-1930
Bergliot Bjørnson
1869-1953
Bjørn Bjørnson
1859-1942
Erling Bjørnson
1868-1959
Eyolf Soot
1859-1928
Inga Bjørnson
1871-1952
Harald Stormoen
1872-1937
Per Paus
1910-1986
Ole Paus
1910-2003
Lillebil Krohn
1899-1989
Tancred Ibsen
1893-1978
Irene Ibsen
1901-1985
Eleonora IbsenSvend Borberg
1888-1947
Botten Soot
1895-1958
Guri Stormoen
1901-1974
Cecilie Wilhelmsen
f. 1943
Christopher PausPeder Paus
f. 1945
Ole Paus
f. 1947
Anne-Karine Strøm
f. 1951
Tancred Ibsen Jr.
1921-2015
Joen Bille
f. 1944
Bente Scavenius
f. 1944
Svend von Düring
1915-1969
Alexander Nix
f. 1975
Olympia Paus
f. 1976
Pontine Paus
f. 1973
Tirill Mohn
f. 1975
Marcus Paus
f. 1979
Nora Ibsen
f. 1951
Beate Bille
f. 1976


  • Rasmus Ibsen (1632–1703), a ship's captain from Stege, Denmark.
    • Peder Rasmussen Ibsen (died 1765), ship's captain and merchant, settled in Bergen where he became a burgher.
      • Henrik Ibsen (1726–1765), merchant in Skien, who married Wenche Dishington (1738–1780). After Ibsen's death, Wenche married parish priest Jacob von der Lippe (1732–1804)
        • Henrich Ibsen (1765–1797), ship's captain and merchant in Skien, who married Johanne Plesner (1770–1847). Henrich Ibsen died at sea in 1797, and Johanne married shipowner Ole Paus (1776–1855).
          • Knud Ibsen (1797–1877), merchant in Skien until his bankruptcy in 1835, who married Marichen Altenburg (1799–1869).
            • Johan Altenburg Ibsen (1826–1828)
            • Henrik Ibsen (1828–1906), playwright, who married Suzannah Thoresen (1836–1914)
              • Sigurd Ibsen (1859–1930), Prime Minister of Norway, who married Bergliot Bjørnson (1869–1953)
                • Tancred Ibsen (1893–1978), film director, who married Lillebil Krohn (1899–1989)
                • Irene Ibsen (1901–1985), author, who married Josias Bille, had issue (including sons Anders Bille (1940-2011) (grandsons: Steen Oluf Bille and Bernt Ivar Bille) and Joen Bille (b. 1944) (granddaughter Beate Bille and grandson Johan Peder Bille)
                • Eleonora Ibsen (1906–1978)
            • Johan Andreas Altenburg Ibsen (born 1830), emigrated to the US in 1849. According to a letter he sent home on May 28, 1850, he settled in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin. Whereabouts since unknown, no known issue.
            • Hedvig Ibsen (1831–1920), married ship's captain Jacob Stousland, had issue (including son Carl Stousland)
            • Nicolai Alexander Ibsen (1834–1888), unmarried, physically disabled after his nanny dropped him to the floor, emigrated to the US in the late 1860s, lived in Estherville, Iowa.
            • Ole Paus Ibsen (1835–1917), married Anne Marthe Boyesen and Jenny Myhre, no issue.

Illegitimate descendants of Henrik Ibsen

As legally established, Henrik Ibsen also had an illegitimate son by the maid Else Sophie Birkedalen (1818–1892), named Hans Jacob Henriksen (Birkedalen) (1846–1916) (Henriksen is an active patronymic, meaning "son of Henrik [Ibsen]", as opposed to the "frozen" patronymic Ibsen). Hans Jacob Henriksen was a blacksmith and married three times, to Mathilde Andreasdatter (1851–1881), Trine Marie Gunvaldsen (died 1882) and Ida Gurine Olsdatter (died 1938). He was the father of eight children, including

  • Jens Hansen Birkedalen (1876–1895), who was a ship's cook at the schooner "Josef af Lillesand", and who died at a hospital in Løgstør, Denmark
  • Ole Hansen Birkedalen (1884–1884), died as an infant
  • Isak Hansen Birkedalen (1885–1888), died as an infant
  • Inga Hansine Hansdatter Birkedalen (1888–1904)
  • Gunda Elise Hansdatter Birkedalen (1892–1896)
  • Jenny Hansdatter Birkedalen (1895–1922)

Henrik Ibsen had no contact with his illegitimate son or grandchildren, who lived in relatively humble conditions. Most of the grandchildren died as children, and neither of them had descendants. Even if they were male line descendants of the Ibsen family, they were not entitled to use the family name Ibsen under the law of the time, were hence legally not considered members of the Ibsen family, and had no inheritance rights. Henrik Ibsen was however obliged to pay for the upbringing of his son until he was 14 years old. After receiving a letter from Grimstad's judge Johan Caspar Preus on the paternity of the child, Henrik Ibsen acknowledged the paternity in a reply letter of 7 December 1846, as "I unfortunately have had sexual intercourse with her."[4]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Bergwitz, 1916
  2. ^ Jæger, 1888
  3. ^ Joan Templeton, Ibsen's women, Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 1ff.
  4. ^ "Nytt lys over Ibsen".

Literature

  • Johan Kielland Bergwitz, Henrik Ibsen i sin avstamning: norsk eller fremmed?, Gyldendal Norsk Forlag, 1916
  • Henrik Jæger, Henrik Ibsen, 1828-1888: A Critical Biography, A.C.McClurg, 1890 (1888)
  • Høgvoll, Arvid; Bærland, Ruth (1996). Henrik Ibsen: herregårder, kammerherrer, godseiere og proprietærer : brokker av en slektshistorie, Nome Antikvariat
  • v
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Henrik Ibsen's family
Ancestors and birth relatives
Grandparents Henrich Ibsen, Johanne Plesner, Johan Andreas Altenburg, Hedevig Paus, Ole Paus (step grandfather), parents Knud Ibsen and Marichen Altenburg, sister Hedvig Ibsen, uncles Christian Cornelius Paus, Henrik Johan Paus, Christopher Blom Paus, great-aunt Kristine Cathrine Ploug (née Altenburg), first cousin Ole Paus, nephew Carl Stousland, first cousin once removed Christopher de Paus
Wife, family-in-law and issue
Wife Suzannah Ibsen (née Thoresen), step mother-in-law Magdalene Thoresen, son Sigurd Ibsen, daughter-in-law Bergliot Ibsen (née Bjørnson), grandson Tancred Ibsen, granddaughter Irene Ibsen Bille (née Ibsen), grandson's wife Lillebil Ibsen (née Krohn), great-grandsons Tancred Ibsen Jr. and Joen Bille, great-great-granddaughters Nora Ibsen and Beate Bille
See also: Ibsen family – Paus family
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