Ivar Aasen

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Template:Short description Template:Copy edit Template:Infobox writer Ivar Andreas Aasen (Template:IPA; 5 August 1813<ref name="nynorsk.no bio"/> – 23 September 1896) was a Norwegian philologist, lexicographer, playwright, and poet.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> He is best known for having assembled one of the two official written versions of the Norwegian language, Nynorsk, from various dialects.<ref name=kat/>

Background

Iver Andreas Aasen was born in 1813 in Åsen, in the parish of Ørsten (now Ørsta Municipality), in the district of Sunnmøre, on the west coast of Norway. His father Ivar Jonsson, a peasant with a small farm, died in 1826. Young Iver was brought up doing farmwork, but he assiduously cultivated all his leisure in reading.<ref name=Gosse4 /> An early interest of his was botany.<ref name=nie>Template:Harvnb</ref> When he was eighteen, he opened an elementary school in his native parish. In 1833, he entered the household of Hans Conrad Thoresen, the husband of the eminent writer Magdalene Thoresen, in the parish of Herø (now Herøy Municipality), where he picked up the elements of Latin. Aasen gradually mastered several languages, and began the scientific study of their structure.<ref name=Gosse4>Template:Harvnb</ref> Ivar single-handedly created a new language for Norway, which later became its "literary" language.<ref name=Colliers>Template:Harvnb</ref>

Career

When Aasen travelled to Bergen in 1841, he met bishop Jacob Neumann, who was very impressed with his work, and had excerpts of it published in Bergens Stiftstidende ("Bergen Diocese Newspaper"). His contacts with Bishop Neumann became Aasen's entrance ticket to the Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters in Trondheim, and generous financial support (an annual grant of 120-200 speciedaler), which made the extensive travel possible to study the Norwegian vernacular. It is said to have been the rector of Trondheim, Fredrik M. Bugge, who came across Neumann's articles while travelling in Bergen and persuaded the scientific society to grant the funding to Aasen.<ref name="Elster">Template:Cite book</ref>

Ivar Aasen (1891)

Therefore, quite early in his career, in 1842, Aasen had begun to receive a grant to enable him to give his entire attention to his philological investigations;<ref name=Gosse5/> he had ceased doing any farmwork by 1846.<ref name=Gosse4 /> Aasen's first monograph in 1843 was a small collection of folk songs in the dialect of his native district, Sunnmøre, which attracted general attention.<ref name=Gosse4 /> His Grammar of the Norwegian Dialects (Template:Langx, 1848) was the result of long studies, and of journeys taken to every part of the country. Aasen's well-known Dictionary of the Norwegian Dialects (Template:Langx) appeared in its original form in 1850, which became the basis of his construction of a popular language or definite folke-maal (Template:Lit) for Norway.<ref name=Gosse4 />

By 1853, he had created the norm for utilizing his new language, which he called Landsmaal, meaning "country language".<ref name=Colliers /> With certain modifications, the most important of which were introduced later by Aasen himself,<ref name=Gosse4 /> but also through a latter policy aiming to merge this Norwegian language with Dano-Norwegian, this language has become Nynorsk (Template:Lit) (see Legacy § Nynorsk).

Aasen composed poems and plays in the composite dialect to show how it should be used. One of these dramas, The Heir (1855), was frequently acted, and may be considered as the pioneer of dialectal literature of the second half of the 19th century, from Vinje to Garborg.<ref name=Gosse5/> In 1856, he published Norske Ordsprog, a treatise on Norwegian proverbs. Aasen continuously enlarged and improved his grammars and his dictionary. He lived very quietly in lodgings in Oslo (then Christiania), surrounded by his books and shrinking from publicity, but his name grew into wide political favour as his ideas about the language of the peasants became more and more the watch-word of the popular party.<ref name=Gosse5>Template:Harvnb</ref> In 1864, he published his definitive grammar of Nynorsk and in 1873 he published the definitive dictionary.<ref name=EB>Template:Harvnb</ref>

The Storting (the Norwegian parliament), conscious of the national importance of his work, treated Aasen in this respect with more and more financial generosity as he advanced in years.<ref name=Gosse5/> He continued his investigations to the last, but it may be said that, after the 1873 edition of his Dictionary (with a new title:<ref name=nie/> Template:Langx), he added but little to his stores.<ref name=Gosse5/>

He died in Christiania on 23 September 1896, and was buried with public honours.<ref name="Gosse5" /><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

Legacy

Tomb of Ivar Aasen at Vår Frelsers gravlund, Oslo

Nynorsk

Template:See also The language constructed by Aasen as Landsmaal would later become known as Nynorsk (Template:Lit), and emerge as the second of Norway's two official languages (the other being Bokmål, the Dano-Norwegian descendant of the Danish language used in Norway in Aasen's time). An unofficial variety of Norwegian closer to Aasen's language is still found in Høgnorsk (Template:Lit). As of the early 2000s, some scholars considered Nynorsk on equal footing with Bokmål, as Bokmål tended to be used more in radio and television and most newspapers, whereas Nynorsk was used equally in government work,<ref name=kat>Template:Harvnb</ref> as well as approximately 17% of schools.<ref name=Hau1>Template:Harvnb</ref> Although it was not as common as its brother language, some scholars argued it needed to be looked upon as a viable language, as a large minority of Norwegians used it as their primary language, including many scholars and authors.<ref name=Hau1 /> Nynorsk is both a written and spoken language.<ref name=hau>Template:Harvnb</ref>

The Ivar Aasen Centre

Ivar Aasen-tunet, an institution devoted to the Nynorsk language, opened in June 2000. The building in Ørsta was designed by Norwegian architect Sverre Fehn. Their web page includes most of Aasens' texts, numerous other examples of Nynorsk literature (in Nettbiblioteket, the Internet Library), and some articles, including some in English, about language history in Norway.

2013 Language year

Template:Main Språkåret 2013 (The Language Year 2013) celebrated Ivar Aasen's 200 year anniversary,<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> as well as the 100 year anniversary of Det Norske Teateret. The year's main focus was to celebrate linguistic diversity in Norway.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> In a poll released in connection with the celebration, 56% of Norwegians said they held positive views of Aasen, while 7% held negative views.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> On Aasen's 200 anniversary, 5 August 2013, Bergens Tidende, which is normally published mainly in Bokmål, published an edition fully in Nynorsk in memory of Aasen.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

Bibliography

Aasen published a wide range of material, some of it released posthumously.

Title Translated title Publication date Type Notes
Det norske Folkesprogs Grammatik Grammar of the Norwegian Dialects 1848 Book <ref name=eb1>Template:Harvnb</ref>
Ordbog over det norske Folkesprog Dictionary of the Norwegian Dialects 1850 Dictionary <ref name=eb1/> On Google Books
Symra Symra 1863 Poetry <ref name=eb1/> Includes the poem Nordmannen.
I Marknaden In the Market 1854 Play <ref name=eb1/>
Ervingen The Heir 1855 Play <ref name=eb1/>
Reise-Erindringer og Reise-Indberetninger Traveling Memories and Travel Reports 1842–1847 Prose Edited by H. Koht (1917)<ref name=eb1/>
Skrifter i Samling Writings in the Collection 1912 Prose 3 volumes<ref name=eb1/>
Dikting Poetry 1946 Prose <ref name=eb1/>

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Footnotes

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References

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