Rasmus Christoffer Effersøe | |
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Born | |
Died | March 23, 1916 | (aged 58)
Rasmus Christoffer Effersøe (May 30, 1857 – March 23, 1916) was a Faroese agronomist, poet, and politician.
Effersøe was born in Trongisvágur. [1] [2] His surname comes from the Icelandic island of Effersey (Old Norse Örfirisey 'island of the ebb tide'). [3] He was the son of the local administrator ( sysselmann) Gudmund Christie Laurentius Isholm Effersøe and the brother of the lawyer Poul Effersøe (1871–1926) and the politician Oliver Effersøe (1863–1933). [4]
Effersøe was educated in Denmark and Sweden, and he worked as an agricultural supervisor. [5] He was one of the nine men that convened the Christmas Meeting of 1888, [5] which is considered the start of the Faroese independence movement; together with Jóannes Patursson, he is considered to have been a driving force in the movement. Effersøe and Patursson founded the Faroese Society ( Faroese: Føringafelag), and Effersøe served as the editor of the society's newspaper, Føringatíðindi, [2] which was the first newspaper written in Faroese. Effersøe also served as the editor of the newspapers Dúgvan and Dimmalætting, and he wrote for the theater, [5] acted in the theater himself, and wrote poetry, [2] including:
Effersøe appears as "the old poet" (den gamle digter) on page 35 of William Heinesen's novel Glataðu spælimenninir (The Lost Musicians). [3] A bust of Effersøe, created by Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen, was unveiled in 1933 in front of the parliament building in Tórshavn. [6]
Rasmus Effersøe died in Tórshavn.