Sneha Girap (Editor)

Knud Ibsen

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Knud Ibsen

Role
  
Henrik Ibsen's father

Spouse
  
Marichen Altenburg


Knud Ibsen

Died
  
October 24, 1877, Skien, Norway

Children
  
Henrik Ibsen, Hedvig Ibsen, Ole Paus Ibsen, Nicolai Alexander Ibsen, Johan Altenburg Ibsen, Johan Andreas Ibsen

Parents
  
Henrich Ibsen, Johanne Plesner

Siblings
  
Christian Cornelius Paus, Henrik Johan Paus

Similar People
  
Henrik Ibsen, Sigurd Ibsen, Suzannah Ibsen, Hedvig Ibsen, Christopher Blom Paus

Knud Plesner Ibsen (3 October 1797, in Skien – 24 October 1877, in Skien) was the father of playwright Henrik Ibsen, and is widely considered the model for many central characters in his son's plays, including most famously Jon Gynt in Peer Gynt and Old Ekdahl in The Wild Duck, but also Daniel Hejre in The League of Youth.

Once a rich merchant in Skien with a lavish lifestyle, Knud Ibsen went bankrupt, an experience which made him an embittered and moody man, and which profoundly influenced his son's work. Knud Ibsen had, like the character Old Ekdahl, also been a lieutenant and a huntsman in his youth.

Knud Ibsen was the son of ship's captain Henrich Ibsen and Johanne Plesner; his paternal great-grandfather had immigrated from Denmark to Norway in 1726; the family's earliest known ancestor was Rasmus Ibsen (1632–1703) from Stege, Denmark (cf. Rasmus Gynt in Peer Gynt). His father died at sea in 1797, and the following year, Johanne married Ole Paus, a ship-owner, and he grew up on the Paus family estate Rising. He was the elder half-brother of lawyer and member of parliament Christian Cornelius Paus and ship-owner and banker Christopher Blom Paus.

Ibsen married Marichen Cornelia Martine Altenburg, daughter of wealthy merchant Johan Andreas Altenburg and Hedvig Paus (the sister of his step-father); they had known each other since childhood.

Young Henrik left Skien never to return at 15, in 1844. He never saw his parents again after his breakthrough as a world-famous playwright, living mostly abroad for 27 years. Knud Ibsen was conscious and proud of his son's success, commenting that "when the Pauses are dead, they are dead, but my name will live on."

References

Knud Ibsen Wikipedia