Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Waldemar Nielsen. By Waldemar Nielsen.
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No comments about Geneological Table of Family's Dyblie and Nielsen in Norway and America.
Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Eunice Kanne. By New Past Press.
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No comments about From Far North Norway.
Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Myrtle Siebert. By Trafford Publishing.
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No comments about From Fjord to Floathouse: One Family's Journey from the Farmlands of Norway to the Coast of British Columbia.
Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Loren, H. Amundson. By Virtualbookworm.com Publishing.
The regular list price is $19.95.
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No comments about Norwegians, Swedes and More: Norway to Minnesota.
Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Linda Stafford. By AuthorHouse.
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No comments about The Berg and Larson Families: From Telemark, Norway to America Volume I.
Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Gerhard B. Naeseth. By Anundsen Publishing Company.
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No comments about Norwegian Immigrants to the United States (Volume One 1825-1843).
Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Jacobson. By Clearfield.
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2 comments about Norwegian Connections.
- An essential, core title for any personal or academic Norwegian-American history or genealogical reference collection, Judy Jacobson's Norwegian Connections From Arctic Fjord To American Prairie covers a wide range of issues and areas ranging from the fjords of Northern Norway to such United States emigration destinations as Iowa, Nebraska, and the Dakotas. The heart and core of Norwegian Connections From Arctic Fjord To American Prairie is dedicated to a series of Norwegian families. Enhanced with maps of Southern Norway and the Senja Island region, Norwegian Connections From Arctic Fjord To American Prairie also features invaluable appendices offering a wealth of supplemental information including a glossary, lists of Norway and United States place names, and a great deal more. Highly recommended.
- As she has done in a number of her other publications (e.g., Southold (Long Island) Connections, and Detroit River Connections), genealogist and librarian Judy Jacobson has universalized an individual family history by giving it broader significance as an example of settlement patterns. In this case, her focus is upon her husband's Norwegian ancestors, the Jacobsons, and others who left the Arctic circle fishing communities like Arberg, Harstad, Moen, and Fredriksberg, commencing with the outbreak of the American Civil War, for homesteading and other opportunities in Minnesota, North Dakota, and other states of the Great Plains. Although many Norwegians emigrated for religious and political reasons, the author reminds us economic dislocation in Norway--owing to the uncertainties of the fishing and mercantile industries--reached such proportions that approximately 200,000 Norwegians emigrated in the 1880s. By the turn of the century, Norwegians represented the largest ethnic group among the 183,000 persons living in North Dakota.
After providing the reader with ample background on the history of Norwegian immigration, Mrs. Jacobson turns to her principal objective: to record the genealogies of families from the Arctic fjords. In this context, she sheds light upon the unusual naming practices that make identifying Norwegian ancestors difficult. For example, Norwegian children typically did not take their father's surname, and surnames were in fact derived from the father's given name. This phenomenon helps to explain why the book ends with a given-name index and a surname index (as well as with indexes of subjects and place names). This important lesson in Norwegian onomastics is followed by detailed genealogical and biographical accounts, drawn from primary and secondary sources, of the following families: Eide, Eidissen, Erichsen, Frostad, Gjertsen, Hemmingsen, Ingebrigtsen, Jacobson, Johansen, Pedersen, Rasmussen, Sagan, Seversen, and Simonsen. Rounding out this fascinating volume are illustrations of various Norwegian communities of origin, several genealogical appendices, and an extensive list of sources.
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Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Frank Smith. By Everton.
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No comments about Genealogical guidebook & atlas of Norway.
Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Virginia Mattson-Schultz. By Dorrance Publishing Co. Inc..
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2 comments about Far Northern Connections: Researching Your Sami (and Other) Ancestors in Northern Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia.
FAR NORTHERN CONNECTIONS: RESEARCHING YOUR SAMI AND OTHER ANCESTORS IN NORTHERN NORWAY, SWEDEN, FINLAND, AND RUSSIA is more than just listing of research methods for genealogists and collections catering to them: it includes charts, explanations of foreign terms, and insights into the web sites and places to begin a search. The author's years of research into her own family history lends to a fine expose of the special challenges involved in research far northern archives for genealogical data.
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
- Like Virginia, I have been interested in my Finnish family roots since my twenties. There had been a little talk about one line of my family having "Lapp" roots I remember in discussions from when I was very small. When I started mapping my family tree, I decided to look into that family line, but I only reached dead ends. Asking family elders helped very little, as that information was either forgotten--or, for various reasons, didn't want to be shared. Having Sami ancestry has been very stigmatized in the Finnish-American community. Virginia's book helped me overcome some of the obstacles. I eventually found out that I was more than just a "little bit" Sami. I probably have at least as much Sami heritage as I do Finnish...a little bit mind-boggling to me, considering that my family has taken so much pride in our Finnish heritage. I still take pride in my Finnish roots, but now I also take pride in my Sami! Virginia also does a good job explaining why Sami heritage has been so suppressed both in the United States and abroad in a way that does not diminish the contributions and sacrifices our immigrant ancestors made for us when they created a new home for us in the United States. A must-read for anyone who is interested in pursuing genealogy and suspects they may have Sami ancestry. Studies have shown there are at least 30,000 Americans with Sami ancestry, but only about 2% are aware of their Sami identity. If this might be you, Virginia's book is a great guide to get you to your destination!
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Posted in Norway (Thursday, September 9, 2010)
Written by Snorri Sturluson. By University of Texas Press.
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5 comments about Heimskringla: History of the Kings of Norway.
- I have never read a more hilarious piece of academic literature. The Norse Kings are so funny... you wouldn't believe how many of them died in drunken accidents. But that's not the book's focus. As a college junior, I found this book to be a great reference for my History and English papers and have included it in my necessary-reference-books collection. Sturluson is great! A very entertaining read.
Word Ninja
- First of all, a great translation! Fun and interesting (often very violent) reading. A good history also. Worth reading.
- "The Heimskringla" was written around 1230 by Snorri Sturluson, a powerful Icelandic chief living in Norway. Snorri also wrote the "Prose (or Younger) Edda", a book about poetry that incidentally gives much valuable information on heathen Scandinavian mythology. While Snorri's contemporaries primarily regarded him as a politician and dangerous enemy, posterity remembers him as a writer and poet.
"The Heimskringla" is a highly entertaining work, at least if you are a hard-core Viking or medievalist buff. The story starts in Sweden, at Old Uppsala, then moves on to Norway, with occasional landfalls in England, Spain, Constantinopel and even Jerusalem. Today, the earliest portion of "the Heimskringla", the saga of the Ynglings, is regarded as purely mythological. While Old Uppsala undoubtedly existed (the large burial mounds mentioned by Snorri still stands), it was hardly the capital of a powerful Swedish kingdom. The later parts of Snorri's work deal with real people: St. Olaf, Magnus the Good, Harald Hardruler, Sigurd the Crusader, and others. This part of "the Heimskringla" blends fact and fiction. Some has been confirmed by other medieval chronicles. For instance, Sigurd did sail all the way from Norway to Palestine around the year 1100! Much else sound like tall-tales, as when St.Olaf, still a young boy, attacks and plunders the heathen Estonians...
Even so, this work tells us a lot about how at least some groups of Scandinavians saw themselves and their world during the 13th century. To a modern reader, much of it sounds shocking. That Muslims and heathens should be killed is taken for granted. Sigurd takes a dip in the Jordan river at the spot where Jesus was baptized. Then, he moves on to kill some infidels. He never sees any contradiction. Martial prowess, at as young an age as possible, is the ideal. Most wars are actually fought between different Christian factions. Part of the heroic exploit is to capture and enslave the womenfolk of your enemies. There are also constant supernatural occurances, as when an angel stops St.Olaf from sailing through the strait of Gibraltar, or when Harald Hardruler is saved by a supernaturally risen St.Olaf!
Most of the people described in this remarkable chronicle are Christians, as was Snorri himself. Yet, it's as if the Viking Age never ended. Onward, Christian Vikings!
- Don't be afraid to start this very, very long book. You can skip around and read the exciting histories of the kings of Norway. I loved the tale of how Norway's "1st King" Harald Fairhair conquered the kingdom for the sake of a gal he liked. The sections on St. Olaf are good too. Happy reading!
- Any prospective reader should know that Snorri has not written a comprehensive history of ALL of the Norwegian kings. His account stops in 1177, so don't expect any juicy gossip about the current king, Harald V or his son, the crown prince Haakon. Still, if the prospective reader's interest is the medieval history of Norway, Snorri's sagas are a good primary source to read. In fact, the prospective reader should stongly consider this work if he or she has a strong interest in medieval history in general, or if he or she is interested in the Christianization of Northern Europe, or if he or she wants to learn more about Norwegian state formation, or if he or she likes to read gory stories about Norwegians killing Norwegians.
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