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Esaias Tegnér

Esaias Tegnér
Esaias Tegnér målad av Sandberg.jpg
Esaias Tegnér as portrayed by Johan Gustaf Sandberg, around 1826.
Born Esaias Tegnér
(1782-11-13)13 November 1782
Kyrkerud, Sweden
Died 2 November 1846(1846-11-02) (aged 63)
Växjö, Sweden
Language Swedish
Nationality Swedish
Notable works Frithjof's Saga
Spouse Anna Maria Gustava Myhrman
Children
  • Christoffer
  • Göthilda
  • Disa
  • Lars Gustaf

Signature

Esaias Tegnér (Swedish: [tɛŋˈneːr]; 13 November 1782 (1782-11-13), Värmland2 November 1846 (1846-11-03), Växjö, Småland), was a Swedish writer, professor of Greek language, and bishop. He was during the 19th century regarded as the father of modern poetry in Sweden, mainly through the national romantic epos Frithjof's Saga. He has been called Sweden's first modern man. Much is known about him, and he also wrote openly about himself.

His father was a pastor, and his grandparents on both sides were peasants. His father, whose name had been Esaias Lucasson, took the surname of Tegnérus—altered by his fifth son, the poet, to Tegnér—from the village of Tegnaby in the province of Småland, where he was born. In 1792 Tegnérus died.

In 1799 Esaias Tegnér, hitherto educated in the country, entered Lund University, where he graduated in philosophy in 1802, and continued as tutor until 1810, when he was elected Greek lecturer. In 1806 he married Anna Maria Gustava Myhrman, to whom he had been attached since his earliest youth. In 1812 he was named professor, and continued to work as a lectuer in Lund until 1824, when he was made Bishop of Växjö. He remained in Växjö until his death, twenty-two years later.

He was comparatively slow in development. His first great success was a dithyrambic war-song for the army of 1808. In 1811 his patriotic poem Svea won the great prize of the Swedish Academy, and made him famous. In the same year was founded in the Gothic League (Götiska förbundet), a sort of club of young and patriotic men of letters, of whom Tegnér quickly became the chief. The club published a magazine, entitled Iduna, in which it printed a great deal of excellent poetry, and ventilated its views, particularly as regards the study of Icelandic literature and old Norse history. Tegnér, Geijer, Afzelius, and Nicander became the most famous members of the Gothic League.


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