I ANLEDNING 300-ÅRSJUBILEET: JOHAN ERNST GUNNERUS OG “AGDERS GUNNERUS” – ET BIDRAG TIL Å FORSTÅ HVORFOR BISKOP GUNNERUS FORESLO ET NORSK UNIVERSITET I KRISTIANSAND I 1771
PDF Norwegian (English)

Słowa kluczowe

Johan Ernst Gunnerus, modern science in Norway, The Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters in Trondheim, Kristiansand, the University of Agder, the Agder Academy of Sciences and Letters

Jak cytować

Jahr, E. H. (2019). I ANLEDNING 300-ÅRSJUBILEET: JOHAN ERNST GUNNERUS OG “AGDERS GUNNERUS” – ET BIDRAG TIL Å FORSTÅ HVORFOR BISKOP GUNNERUS FORESLO ET NORSK UNIVERSITET I KRISTIANSAND I 1771. Scripta Neophilologica Posnaniensia, 19, 233–246. https://doi.org/10.14746/snp.2019.19.16

Abstrakt

The paper is written in connection with the 2018 300th anniversary of the birth of the professor and bishop, Johan Ernst Gunnerus (1718–1773), who founded modern science in Norway and who, in 1760, also founded the first learned society in the country: The Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters in Trondheim. In 1758 Professor Gunnerus was appoined the bishop for the whole of northern Norway, as the bishop of Trondheim. In 1771 Bishop Gunnerus was called to the capital of the then Danish-Norwegian kingdom, Copenhagen, with the mission of reforming the Copenhagen university, at that time the only university in the entire dual kingdom. In his recommendation for reforms of the university, he also included a proposal for the establishment of a university in Norway. In this proposal, he argued for the city of Kristiansand as the most suitable location for that university. If the King would follow his recommendation, he would himself move to Kristiansand and also bring with him the Royal Society from Trondheim. Many people have subsequently wondered why he chose to point to Kristiansand for the establishment of the first Norwegian university, and not Oslo (where the university was finally opened in 1813) or Trondheim (where he had founded the Royal Society 11 years earlier). It has been thought that Gunnerus suggested Kristiansand mainly because the fact that the city was close to Denmark and a university there could perhaps have also recruited students from northern Jutland. Some have even suggested that Gunnerus proposed Kristiansand because he knew it would not be acceptable to Copenhagen or to the King, and then Trondheim (his “real” wish) could then emerge as a more plausible candidate, even if it was situated rather far north. In this paper, I argue that until now everybody who has discussed Gunnerus' choice of location for a Norwegian university has missed one decisive point: before Gunnerus moved from Copenhagen (where he was professor) to Trondheim (as bishop), Kristiansand was known in Norway, Denmark and the rest of Europe as the Norwegian centre for science and research. This was due to just one man, Bishop Jens Christian Spidberg (1684–1762). I show how Spidberg established himself through international publications as the leading scientist in Norway, and how everybody with a scientific question during the first half of the 18th century looked to Kristiansand and Spidberg for the answer. This, I argue, gave
Kristiansand an academic and scientific reputation that Gunnerus was very well aware of and could exploit in his recommendation of Kristiansand as the location for the first Norwegian university. However, this knowledge about this reputation of Kristiansand’s in the first half of the 18th century has since been lost completely, mostly because Gunnerus’ fundamental seminal contribution in the second half of the 18th century has completely overshadowed the academic situation in Norway before his time. Finally in 2007 a university, the University of Agder, was established in Kristiansand, on the basis of a university college with academic roots going back to 1828. An academy of science, the Agder Academy of Sciences and Letters, was founded in 2002. A formal agreement of cooperation between the Royal Society and the then university college was signed 2001, and the academy joined the agreement in 2005. This agreement confirmed the long academic ties between Kristiansand and Trondheim, going all the way back to the scientific positions first held by Spidberg in Kristiansand and then by Gunnerus in Trondheim.

https://doi.org/10.14746/snp.2019.19.16
PDF Norwegian (English)

Bibliografia

Amundsen, L. (red.). 1976. Johan Ernst Gunnerus og Carl von Linné. Brevveksling 1761–772. Trondheim- Oslo-Bergen-Tromsø: Universitetsforlaget.

Dahl, O. 1892. Biskop Gunnerus’ virksomhed fornemmelig som botaniker. Tilligemed en oversigt over botanikkens tilstand i Danmark og Norge indtil hans død. I. Oversigt over botanikkens tilstand i Danmark og Norge indtil Gunnerus’ død (= Særtrykk av Det Kongelige Norske Videnskabers Selskabs Skrifter for 1888–1890). Trondhjem: Interessentskabstrykkeriet.

Faye, A. 1867. Christianssands Stifts Bispe- og Stiftshistorie. Chistiania [Oslo]: Brøgger og Christie’s Bogtrykkeri.

Gunnerus, J.E. 1758. Johan Ernst Gunnerus Hans Opvækkelige Hyrde-Brev Til det Velærverdige, Højog Vellærde Præsteskab i Tronhjems Stift. Tronhjem: Jens Christian Winding.

Hagland, J.R. 2005a. „Johan Ernst Gunnerus – ei biografisk skisse.” I: Nielsen og Supphellen (red.). 11–19.

Hagland, J.R. 2005b. „Om studiar av norsk språk i ‘de smukke Videnskabers’ tid.” I: Nielsen og Supphellen (red.). 73–85.

Jahr, E.H. 2015. „Jens Christian Spidberg: Agders Gunnerus”. Dag og Tid 54, nr. 42. 35.

Jørgensen, P.M., Weidemann, E. og E. Fremstad. 2016. Flora Norvegica av J. E. Gunnerus. På norsk og med kommentarer (= Gunneria 80). Trondheim: NTNU Vitenskapsmuseet.

Midbøe, H. 1960. Det Kongelige Norske Videnskabers Selskabs historie 1760–1960. Første bind. Trondheim: Det Kongelige Norske Videnskabers Selskab.

Nicolaysen, B.K. 1991. Bibliografi til historia om lesing i Noreg (= Eigenproduksjon 41). Bergen: Universitetet i Bergen, Nordisk institutt.

Nielsen, M.-B.O. og S. Supphellen. (red.). 2005. Johan Ernst Gunnerus – Samtid og vitenskaper (Forskningsserien nr. 46. Høgskolen i Agder, Kristiansand). Kristiansand: Høyskoleforlaget.

Nielsen, Y. 1911. “Indledning”. I: Det kongelige Fredriks universitet 1811–1911. Festskrift. I. Kristiania: Aschehoug. III–LX.

Nissen, K. 1962. “Johan Ernst Gunnerus”. I: Jansen, E. et al. (red.). Norsk biografisk leksikon, bind XIV (Skredsvig–Stenersen). Oslo: Aschehoug. 242–247.

Rønning, O.I. 2005. “Gunnerus, Linné og botanikken”. I: Nielsen og Supphellen (red.). 53–62.

Sakshaug, E. 2005. “Gunnerus og marinzoologien”. I: Nielsen og Supphellen (red.). 63–72.

Spidberg, J.C. 1724. Historische Demonstration und Anmerckung über die Eigenschafften und Ursachen des so genandten Nord-Lichts. Halle: Johann Adam Spörl.

S[pidberg], J.C. 1738. [Beretning om nordlys] „Christiansand i Norge den 30. Jan. 1738”. I: Nye Tidender om lærde og curieuse Sager. Kjøbenhavn. 116-118.

[Spidberg, J.C.] 1747. „Utdrag Utur Kongl. Vetenskaps Academiens Dagbok, samt inkommne Bref och Handlingar. I.” [GeheimeRådet Raben „har ifrån Köpenhamn öfversendt et Rön som Herr SPIELBERG [d.e. Spidberg] giordt angående en jordbäfning som tildragit sig vid Christiansand i Norrige den 7 Februar. 1745”.]. I: Kongl. Svenska Vetenskaps Academiens Handlingar, För År 1747. Vol. 8. Stockholm: Lorentz Ludvig Grefing. 233-234.

Spidberg, J.C. 1758. „Historisk og physisk Relation om det mærkværdige Jordskielv i Norge, Lisabon og andre Stæder den I Novembr. 1755”. I: Skrifter, som udi det Kiøbenhavnske Selskab af Lærdoms og Videnskabers Elskere ere fremlagte og oplæste i Aarene 1755, 1756, 1757 og 1758 (= Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab Skrifter 7). Kjøbenhavn: Waysenhuses Forlag. 101-112.

Spidberg, J.C. 1763. Catalogus Bibliothecæ qvam Post Incendium Christiansandense d. 4 Maji 1734, qvo 6000 librorum collectio flammis periit, de novo collegit & reliqvit Vir Perillustris Et Doctor, Espiscopus Diæceseos Christiansandensis [&c.], qvæqve venum exponetur Christiansandiæ d [16] August. 1783. Christianiæ.

Stylegar, F.-A. 2012. „Den lærde biskopen”. Fædrelandsvennen 23.6. 34.

Supphellen, S. 1994. „Nasjonalånd framfor lokalpatriotisme? Frå debatten om lokalisering av det første norske universitetet.” I: Andersen, H.W., Dahl, S., Haarstad, K. og J. Simonsen. (red.). Clios trotjener. Festskrift til Per Fuglum (= Skriftserie fra Historisk institutt nr. 1). Trondheim: Historisk institutt, Universitetet i Trondheim. 172–190.

Sætra, G. 2005. “Kristiansand som sentrum og periferi på 1800-tallet”. I: Nielsen og Supphellen (red.). 99–117.

Åsen, P.A. 1982. “Om biskop Jens Christian Spidberg og hammerhaien som ble fanget ved Kristiansand i 1727.” Kristiansand Museums Årbok 1981. Kristiansand. 12–17.