Anders Hovden

Anders Hovden (April 6, 1860 – November 26, 1943) was a Norwegian Lutheran clergyman, hymnwriter poet and author.[1]

Anders Hovden
Portrait of Anders Hovden at Hoff Church
Born(1860-04-06)6 April 1860
Died26 November 1943(1943-11-26) (aged 83)
OccupationLutheran minister, hymnwriter, author, poet
Spouse(s)Lina Marie Devold (1865–1895)
Kari Huglen (1879–1963)

Education and career

Anders Karlsen Hovden was born at Ørsta in Møre og Romsdal, Norway. His parents were Karl Rasmussen Hovden and Johanne Andersdatter Velle. His father died when he was 16, but fellow Ørsta native Ivar Aasen helped him get an education: first the teachers' training college in Volda, then examen artium at the University of Oslo. Hovden became cand.theol. in 1886 and then worked some years as a teacher. From 1891 he was a Lutheran minister in Lista, Son, Sande, Vanse, Krødsherad, Melhus and Østre Toten.[2]

Hymnwriter

Hovden was the author of over 250 hymns. He debuted in the mid-1890s with a couple of poetry collections, however, it was in 1897 with his third collection, Tungalda that he received popular acclaim in wider circles. His breakthrough came in 1901 with the poetry cycle Bonden. He was also on the revision board for Landstads kirkesalmebog which was the main hymnal for the Church of Norway prior to 1926. From 1928, he was co-editor the Norwegian hymnal, Nynorsk salmebok, which contained 23 original hymns by Anders Hovden and 16 translations from nynorsk. Most notable among his compositions was the Norwegian national hymn Fagert er landet ("Fair is the country"). He retired from his ministry in 1931.[3]

Author

Hovden also wrote a number of books, of which his autobiography Attersyn (1926) is best known. He also wrote Per Sivle – ei livssoge (1905), the first biography of Norwegian poet and novelist, Per Sivle. Published one year after his death, it contributed to the then obscure Sivle's increasing national popularity.[4]

Bibliography

  • Sunnmøringen (1894)
  • Sviv (1895)
  • Heimhug (1896)
  • Tungalda (1897)
  • Bonden (1901)
  • Per Sivle – ei livssoge (1905)
  • Gate og grend (1905)
  • Stormfugl (1906)
  • Solhov (1907)
  • Liv og lagmand (1908)
  • Attersyn (1926)

Personal life

Anders Hovden was married twice and was the father of ten children. His first wife Lina Marie Devold (1865–1895), died after only four years of marriage and the birth of two children. Two years later Hovden married with Kari Huglen (1879–1963). They had eight children together.[5]

gollark: More vague predictions: computers will generally get faster, but also half the computing power will end up wasted on increasingly flashy animations, poorly programmed applications, and other random nonsense like that.
gollark: Okay, no response right now.
gollark: ?remind 5y "hello future"
gollark: I may or may not have *a* closed timelike curve, but you can only send information that way.
gollark: ?remind 5y check prediction ("Vague trend guess for the future: prosperity will generally tend upwards, unless it goes down really sharply due to some sudden bad event.") against reality

References

  1. Hallgeir Elstad. "Anders Hovden". Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
  2. "Anders Karlsen". Folketelling 1865 for 1519P Volda prestegjeld. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
  3. "Fagert er landet". Sanger. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
  4. Eirik Helleve. "Per Sivle". Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
  5. "Anders Karlsen hovden". Nordisk familjebok. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
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