Sigurd Ibsen - Literature

Literature

  • Langslet, Lars Roar. Sønnen. Cappelen, 2004 ISBN 82-02-22101-3
  • Steine, Bjørn Arne. Sigurd Ibsen : nasjon, politikk og kultur. Voksenåsen AS, 2005 ISBN 82-90617-34-8
  • Rudeng, Erik (1994) “En statsmann i reserve”, Nytt norsk tidsskrift 11 (3-4): 266-280.
  • Ibsen, Sigurd. Bak en gyllen fasade, Sigurd Ibsens brev til familien 1883-1929. Aschehoug, 1997. (Thorleif Dahls Kulturbibliotek) ISBN 82-03-26141-8
  • Ibsen, Sigurd. Videnskab og mystik og andre essays. Grøndahl Dreyer, 1992. ISBN 82-504-1920-0
  • Ibsen, Sigurd. Unionen. 1887
  • sambok 29 treff på S. Ibsen som forfatter
Henrik Ibsen's family
Ancestors and birth relatives Grandparents Henrich Ibsen, Johanne Plesner, Johan Andreas Altenburg, Hedevig Christine 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 – Related families: Paus, Plesner, Blom, Bille
Authority control
  • VIAF: 49292428
Persondata
Name Ibsen, Sigurd
Alternative names
Short description Norwegian politician
Date of birth 23 December 1859
Place of birth
Date of death 14 April 1930
Place of death


This article about a Norwegian writer, poet or journalist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

Read more about this topic:  Sigurd Ibsen

Famous quotes containing the word literature:

    Woe to that nation whose literature is cut short by the intrusion of force. This is not merely interference with freedom of the press but the sealing up of a nation’s heart, the excision of its memory.
    Alexander Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918)

    The Irishman in English literature may be said to have been born with an apology in his mouth.
    James Connolly (1870–1916)

    First literature came to refer only to itself, the literary theory.
    Mason Cooley (b. 1927)