Ludvig Daae (priest)

Ludvig Daae (May 9, 1723 – February 18, 1786) was a Norwegian priest and landowner.

The current Lindås Church

Daae was born in Vik in Sogn og Fjordane county,[1][2] the son of Anders Daae (1680–1763) and Birgitte Munthe. He received a master's degree in philosophy in 1746, after which he used the title Mag. or Magister 'master'.[3] Daae served as the parish priest in Lindås from 1759 onward. Daae married Drude Cathrine Haar (1739–1787)[1] when she was 15 years old.[2] He had 15 children with her,[2] and several of his children and grandchildren served as priests and officers in Western Norway.[4] Daae was the grandfather of the historian Ludvig Kristensen Daa and the priest Claus Daae, and the great-grandfather of the politician Ludvig Daae, the historian Ludvig Ludvigsen Daae, and Suzannah Daae Thoresen, the wife of Henrik Ibsen.[4] Daae died and was buried on the island of Lygra in Hordaland county.[2][5]

Daae left an estate that included 23 farms in Sogn and 31 parts of farms in Lindås. He also owned many churches with tithes: churches in the parish of Lindås (Lindås, Myking, Sandnes, and Lygra churches), Arnafjord Church and Hove Church in the parish of Vik, and Hamre Church in Osterøy. The churches and land in the estate amounted to a sales value of over 12,000 rixdollars.[6]

Descendants

Daae had several notable descendants:

  • Ludvig Daae (1723–1786)
    • Anders Daae (1758–1816), priest
      • Hans Daae (1808–1865), priest
        • Anders Daae, physician, prison director
        • Iver Munthe Daae, customs officer in China, art collector
    • Johan Christopher Haar Daae, priest
    • Iver Munthe Daae, priest
      • Claus Daae priest, politician
      • Jens Kobro Daae, priest
    • Christen Daae, priest

References

  1. Sanden, Jarle, ed. (2008). Romsdalsmuseet Årbok 2008. Molde: Romsdalsmuseet. p. 384.
  2. Solheim, Torolv (1978). Ei strilekrønike. Oslo: Samlaget. p. 117.
  3. Daae, Aagaat (1917). Magister Ludvig Daae, sogneprest til Lindaas og hustru Drude Catherine Haar. Trondheim: A/S Adresseavisens Boktrykkeri.
  4. Holmesland, Arthur (1969). Aschehougs konversasjonsleksikon, vol. 5 (5 ed.). Oslo: Aschehoug. p. 215.
  5. Frå Fjon til Fusa: årbok for Hordamuseet og for Nord- og Midhordland Sogelag. Bergen. 1954. p. 56.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. Lampe, Johan Fredrik (1895). Bergens Stifts Biskoper og Præster efter Reformationen. Kristiania: Cammermeyer. p. 369.
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