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Fritjof NANSEN

Fritjof NANSEN

Male 1861 - 1930  (68 years)

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  • Name Fritjof NANSEN 
    Birth 10 Oct 1861  Lille Frøen Oslo Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Occupation
    • Polfarer og nasjonalhelt
    Residence Lysaker Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Death 13 May 1930 
    Notes 
    • Kunnskapsforlaget: Nansen, Fridtjof, 10. okt. 1861-13. mai 1930, norsk vitenskapsmann, humanist og diplomat; g.m. E.N. Konservator i zoologi ved Bergens Museum 1882-88, dr.philos. 1888, konservator ved Universitetet i Oslo 1889-93, prof. i zoologi sst. 1897, fra 190 8 i oseanografi. Foretok 1888 i løpet av 42 dager en skiferd over Grønlands innlandsis til vestkysten. 1893-96 ledet han en ekspedisjon med polarskipet Fram fra Sibirkysten mot Nordpolen. Planen var at havstrømmen skulle føre skipet over Nordpole n mot Grønland. Da strømmen gav skipet en mer sørlig kurs enn antatt, gjorde Nansen og Hjalmar Johansen i 1895 et fremstøt mot polen med hunder, sleder og kajakker. De måtte snu på 86°4' (etter Nansens opprinnelige beregning 86°14'), det nordligst e punkt noen til da hadde nådd. Nansen gjennomførte senere flere forskningsferder i Norskehavet. Under unionskrisen 1905 skrev Nansen artikler i verdenspressen der han klarla den norske regjerings standpunkt, og medvirket ved flere konferanser som førte til en rekke lands godkjenning av unionsoppløsningen. 1906-08 sendemann i London. Ledet un der den første verdenskrig forhandlingene med USA om forsyninger til Norge av matvarer og råstoffer. Nansen agiterte 1914 for forsvarssaken og deltok i stiftelsen av Fedrelandslaget 1925. Representerte Norge i Folkeforbundet 1920-29. 1920 opptok han etter oppdrag fra Folkeforbundet arbeidet med hjemsending av ca. 450 000 krigsfanger i Mellom-Europa og Russland. Under hungersnøden i Volgadalen 1921 ledet han et storstilt hjelpearbeid, og han tok 1922 initiativet til en omfatten de folkeutveksling mellom Hellas og Tyrkia. Tildelt Nobels fredspris 1922. Nansen utgav reiseskildringer, til dels illustrert med egne tegninger, geografiske verker m.m., bl.a. På ski over Grønland (1890), Fram over Polhavet (1897), Russland og freden (1927), Gjennom Armenia (1927), Gjennom Kaukasus til Volga (1929). Han s artikler og taler, Nansens røst, utkom 1942. Samlede verker utkom 1961.

      Britanicus: Nansen, Fridtjof

      b. Oct. 10, 1861, Store-Frøen, near Kristiania [now Oslo], Nor.--d. May 13, 1930, Lysaker, near Oslo), Norwegian explorer, oceanographer, statesman, and humanitarian who led a number of expeditions to the Arctic (1888, 1893, 1895-96) and oceanogra phic expeditions in the North Atlantic (1900, 1910-14). For his relief work after World War I he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace (1922).

      Early life.

      Nansen went to school in Kristiania, where, in 1880, he passed his entrance examination to the university. He chose to study zoology in the expectation that fieldwork would give him the chance of an outdoor life and enable him to make use of his artistic talents. Although scientific work was always closest to his heart, he first attained fame as an explorer.

      As a young man Nansen was a great outdoor athlete, an accomplished skater and skier, and a keen hunter and fisherman. In 1882, when he joined the sealing ship Viking for a voyage to the Greenland waters, Nansen first saw at a distance Greenland's mighty ice cap. It occurred to him that it ought to be possible to cross it, and gradually he developed a plan, which he announced in 1887. Instead of starting from the inhabited west coast, he would start from the east coast and, by cutting of f his means of retreat, would force himself to go forward. The expedition of six from Norway started the crossing on Aug. 15, 1888. After enduring storms and intense cold, they reached the highest point of the journey (8,920 feet [2,719 m]) on Septembe r 5 and struck the west coast at Ameralik fjord on September 26. They were forced to winter at the settlement of Godthåb (Nuuk), where Nansen took the opportunity to study the Eskimos and gather material for his book Eskimoliv (1891; Eskimo Life). The party returned home in triumph in May 1889.

      In 1890 Nansen presented before the Norwegian Geographical Society a plan for an even more hazardous expedition. Having collected evidence showing that the ice of the polar sea drifted from Siberia toward Spitsbergen, he proposed to build a shi p of such a shape that it would be lifted but not crushed when caught by the ice. He proposed to let this ship freeze in off eastern Siberia in order to be carried from there across the Arctic Ocean to Spitsbergen by the currents. Though his plan was severely criticized by contemporary Arctic explorers, the Norwegian Parliament granted two-thirds of the estimated expenses, and the rest was raised by subscriptions from King Oscar II and private individuals. His ship, Fram (i.e., "Forward"; now preserved outside Oslo), was built according to his ideas. (see also Index: Arctic Ocean)

      With a complement of 13 men, the Fram sailed from Kristiania on June 24, 1893. On September 22 it was enclosed by the ice at 7850' N, 133 37' E; it froze in, and the long drift began. It bore the pressur e of the ice perfectly. On March 14, 1895, Nansen, being satisfied that the Fram would continue to drift safely, left it in 844' N, 102 27' E, and started northward with dogsleds and kayaks, accompanied by one F.H. Johansen. On April 8 they turned back from 86 14' N, the highest latitude then yet reached by man, and headed toward Franz Josef Land. As they approached the northern islands, progress was hampered by open water and, becaus e of the advanced season, they wintered on Frederick Jackson Island (named by Nansen after the British Arctic explorer), where they stayed from Aug. 26, 1895, to May 19, 1896. They built a hut of stone and covered it with a roof of walrus hides and live d during the winter mainly on polar bear and walrus meat, using the blubber as fuel. On their way to Spitsbergen they encountered Frederick Jackson and his party of the Jackson-Harmsworth expedition, on June 17, and returned to Norway in his ship Windward, reaching Vardø on August 13. The Fram also reached Norway safely, having drifted north to 85 57'. Nansen and his companions on board the Fram were given a rousing welcome, which reached its climax on their arrival in Kristiani a on September 9. His two-volume account of the expedition, Fram over Polhavet (Farthest North), appeared in 1897.

      Scientific work.

      Nansen's success as an explorer was due largely to his careful evaluation of the difficulties that might be encountered, his clear reasoning, which was never influenced by the opinions of others, his willingness to accept a calculated risk, his thorough planning, and his meticulous attention to detail. Many of these traits can be recognized in his scientific writings. In 1882 he was appointed curator of zoology at the Bergen museum. He wrote papers on zoological and histological subjects , illustrated by excellent drawings. For one of his papers, "The Structure and Combination of Histological Elements of the Central Nervous System" (1887), the university in Kristiania conferred upon him the degree of doctor of philosophy. Though the paper contained so many novel interpretations that the committee that had to examine it accepted it with doubt, it is now considered a classic.

      On his return from the Fram expedition in 1896, a professorship in zoology was established for Nansen at the university in Kristiania, but his interests shifted from zoology to physical oceanography, and in 1908 his status was changed to professo r of oceanography. During 1896-1917 he devoted most of his time and energy to scientific work. He edited the report of the scientific results of his expedition and himself wrote some of the most important parts. He participated in the establishmen t of the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea and for some time directed the council's central laboratory in Kristiania. In 1900 he joined the Michael Sars on a cruise in the Norwegian Sea. In 1910 he made a cruise in the Fridtjof throug h the northeastern North Atlantic; in 1912 he visited the Spitsbergen waters on board his own yacht Veslemoy; and in 1914 he joined B. Helland-Hansen on an oceanographic cruise to the Azores in the Armauer Hansen. In 1913 Nansen traveled through the Bar ents Sea and the Kara Sea to the mouth of the Yenisey River and back through Siberia. He published the results of his cruises in numerous papers, partly in cooperation with Helland-Hansen. His lasting contributions to oceanography comprise improvemen t and design of instruments, explanation of the wind-driven currents of the seas, discussions of the waters of the Arctic, and explanation of the manner in which deep- and bottom-water is formed.

      Nansen also dealt with other subjects: for instance, his Nord i tåkeheimen, 2 vol. (1911; In Northern Mists) gave a critical review of the exploration of the northern regions from early times up to the beginning of the 16th century.

      Statesman and humanitarian.

      As Nansen grew older he became more interested in the relations between individuals and nations. In 1905 he took a lively part in the discussion about the dissolution of the union between Norway and Sweden. His attitude may be summarized by his wo rds: "Any union in which the one people is restrained in exercising its freedom is and will remain a danger." On the establishment of the Norwegian monarchy, Nansen was appointed its first minister in London (1906-08). In 1917, during World Wa r I, he was appointed head of a Norwegian commission to the United States and negotiated a satisfactory agreement with the U.S. government about the import of essential supplies to Norway.

      At the first assembly of the League of Nations in 1920, the Norwegian delegation was headed by Nansen, who was to remain one of the outstanding members of the assembly until his death. In April 1920 the council of the League of Nations gave Nanse n his first great task, appointing him high commissioner responsible for the repatriation from Russia of about 500,000 prisoners of war from the former German and Austro-Hungarian armies. The Soviet government would not recognize the League of Nation s but negotiated with Nansen personally, and in September 1922 he reported to the third assembly of the League that his task was completed and that 427,886 prisoners of war had been repatriated.

      In August 1921 Nansen was asked by the International Committee of the Red Cross to direct an effort to bring relief to famine-stricken Russia. He accepted, and on August 15 a conference in Geneva, at which 13 governments and 48 Red Cross organizat ions were represented, appointed him high commissioner of this new venture. On August 27 he concluded an agreement with the Soviet government authorizing him to open in Moscow an office of the "International Russian Relief Executive." Nansen's reques t to the League for financial assistance was turned down, but by appealing to private organizations and by addressing large public meetings he succeeded in raising the necessary funds.

      On July 5, 1922, on Nansen's initiative, an international agreement was signed in Geneva introducing the identification card for displaced persons known as the "Nansen passport." In 1931 the Nansen International Office for Refugees was created in Geneva (after Nansen's death); it cared mainly for anti-Communist ("White") Russians, for Armenians from Turkey, and, later, for Jews from Nazi Germany.

      In 1922 Nansen was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace; he used the prize money for the furtherance of international relief work. The Nansen International Office for Refugees won the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1938. BIBLIOGRAPHY. Jon Sörensen, The Saga of Fridtjof Nansen (1932), is a good, relatively brief biography. Liv Nansen Høyer, Nansen: A Family Portrait (1957), was written by his daughter.
    Person ID I20448  Valdres Slekt
    Last Modified 20 Nov 2007 

    Father Baldur Fritjof NANSEN,   b. 1817, Egersund Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1885 (Age 68 years) 
    Mother Adelaide Johanne Isodora Wedel JARLSBERG 
    Family ID F7528  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Eva SARS,   b. 1858   d. 1907 (Age 49 years) 
    Children 
    +1. Odd Fritjofen NANSEN,   b. 1901   d. 1973 (Age 72 years)
    Family ID F7529  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 20 Nov 2007 



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