
Dorothe Engelbretsdotter

1685 engraving showing Engelbretsdotter at work
Dorothe Engelbretsdotter (
January 16 1634 in
Bergen, Norway –
February 19 1716 in Bergen), was a
Norwegian poet, the daughter of
Engelbret Jørgenssøn and
Anna Wrangel. She was
Norway's first recognized female author.
Engelbretsdotter was born in
Bergen; her father,
Engelbrecht Jorgensen, was originally head of the high school in that city, and afterwards dean of the cathedral.
In 1652 she married
Ambrosius Hardenbeck, a
theological writer famous for his flowery funeral sermons, who succeeded her father at the cathedral in 1659. They had five sons and four daughters. In 1678 her first volume appeared,
Själens aandelige Sangoffer ("The Souls Spiritual Offering of Song") published at
Copenhagen. This volume of
hymns and
devotional pieces, very modestly brought out, had an unparalleled success. The fortunate poetess was invited to
Denmark, and on her arrival at Copenhagen was presented at court. She was also introduced to
Thomas Hansen Kingo, the father of Danish poetry, and the two greeted one another with improvised couplets, which have been preserved and of which the poetess' reply is incomparably the neater.
In 1683 her husband died. She had nine children, but seven of them died and two of them disappeared. Her sorrow is evident in examples such as the poem
Afften Psalme. Her first work,
Siælens Sang-offer, was published 1678. In the midst of her troubles appeared her second work, the
Tåreoffer ("Sacrifice of Tears"), published for the first time in 1685. It is a continuous religious poem in four books. This was combined with the
Sangoffer, and no fewer than three editions of the united works were published before her death, and many after it. In 1698 she brought out a third volume of sacred verse,
Et kristeligt Valet fra Verden ("A Christian Farewell to the World"), a very tame production. She died on
19 February 1716. The first verses of Engelbrechtsdatter are the best; her
Sangoffer was dedicated to
Jesus, the
Tåreoffer to
Queen Charlotte Amalia; this is significant of her changed position in the eyes of the world.
She has been characterized as Norway's first feminist before
feminism became a recognized concept. She was the first female author to make her living by writing.
Category:Norwegian poetsCategory:1634 birthsCategory:1713 deathsCategory:17th-century women writersCategory:Norwegian women writersCategory:17th-century Norwegian peopleno:Dorothe Engelbretsdotternn:Dorothe Engelbretsdottersl:Dorothe Engelbretsdottersv:Dorothe Engelbretsdatter