Johan Ernst Welhaven
Johan Ernst Welhaven (October 30, 1775 – March 10, 1828) was a well-liked priest at St. George's Hospital Church in Bergen, Norway.[1] He made great efforts to better conditions for the hospital's lepers.[2][3][4] He was also the father of the author and poet Johan Sebastian Welhaven.[2][5]
Johan Ernst Welhaven | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | March 10, 1828 52) | (aged
Nationality | Norwegian |
Occupation | Priest |
Known for | Hospital work with lepers |
Ancestry
Welhaven's grandfather, Christopher Welhaven or Welhaver (1725–1783), was a passementerie maker from Ribnitz near the Hanseatic city of Rostock in what is northeastern Germany today.[6][7] His son, Johan Andreas Welhaven (1748–1811), came to Bergen at the age of 17 as an apprentice at Bryggen. After six years, he became a journeyman.[7] In time, he became a teacher at the German school for the poor established in 1777 in connection with St. Mary's Church in Bergen. Later he also became an organist and sexton at that church. He married Elisabeth Margrethe Woltmann (died 1814), who was also from northeast Germany. Johan Andreas Welhaven appears to have been a hard-working man that, in addition to acquiring the Norwegian language, paid for higher education for his three sons, including Johan Ernst Welhaven.
Life
Welhaven was ordained a priest in 1801, and he spent his entire working life at St. George's Hospital Church, initially as the curate (1801–1807), and later as the parish priest (1808–1827).[6] In 1806 he married Else Margrethe Cammermeyer (1785–1853).[8] Welhaven's father-in-law, Johan Sebastian Cammermeyer (1730–1819), was a Danish curate at Holy Cross Church in Bergen. His mother-in-law, Maren née Heiberg (1742–1812), was also of Danish descent and thereby the aunt of the Danish poet Peter Andreas Heiberg (the father of Johan Ludvig Heiberg).
In 1827/28 Welhaven received a prestigious position at the Bergen Cathedral, but he died just before he was to begin his duties there.
Descendants
Many central figures in Norwegian culture and society are descendants of Johan Ernst Welhaven and Else Margrethe Cammermeyer. Among their eleven children are the three authors Johan Sebastian Welhaven (1807–1873), Elisabeth Welhaven (1815–1901), and Johan Ernst Welhaven Junior (1818–1883). Through their daughter Maren Welhaven (1811–1889), who married Michael Sars (1805–1869), they were the grandparents of the historian Ernst Sars (1835–1917), the singer Eva Nansen (1858–1907), and the zoologist Georg Ossian Sars (1837–1927).
References
- Beyer, Edvard (1975). Norges litteratur historie. Oslo: Cappelen. p. 292.
- Jorgenson, Theodore (1933). History of Norwegian Literature. New York. p. 192.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Gould, Tony (2014). A Disease Apart: Leprosy in the Modern World. New York: St. Martin's Press.
- Quah, Stella R. (2016). International Encyclopedia of Public Health. Amsterdam: Elsevier. p. 403.
- "Johan Sebastian Welhaven". Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian). Retrieved March 7, 2019.
- Helland, Amund (1916). Norges land og folk: Bergen. Kristiania: Aschehoug. p. 307.
- Koren-Wiberg, Christian (1899). Det tyske kontor i Bergen: tegninger med beskrivelse. Bergen: Grieg. p. 93.
- von der Lippe Gran, Gerhard (1914). Normænd i det 19de aarhundrede. Oslo: Aschehoug. p. 381.