Constance Wiel Schram Explained
Constance Wiel Schram (née Nygaard; 27 September 1890, Christiania – 18 September 1955, Oslo) was a Norwegian writer and translator. She was the daughter of William Martin Nygaard (1865–1912) and Constance Wiel (1866–1931). Constance was the eldest of seven siblings, one of her brothers was the publisher, Mads Wiel Nygaard . She married Finn Thomas Andreas Schram on 26 Jul 1912, and they had a son, Andreas.
Partial works
History and biographies
- Norske Kvinners Sanitetsforening. Tiden og menneskene som skapte den. Vekst og virke i femti år. 1896-1946 ("Norwegian Women's Public Health Association. The time and the people who created it. Growth and work in fifty years. 1896-1946"), Oslo 1946
- Florence Nightingale, Oslo 1938
- Keiserarven. Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, Oslo 1926
- Dronning Victoria. En Livsskildring, Kristiania 1922
- Otto v, Bismarck. En livsskidring, Kristiania 1916
Children's books
- Truls på Lofoten 1927
- Truls og Inger og dyrene deres. Fortalt for små barn, Oslo 1925
Translations into Norwegian
- Georg Soloveitsjik: Potemkin. Soldat, statsmann, elsker og Katarina den stores ektefelle, Oslo 1939
- Francis Hackett: Frans den første, Oslo 1935
- Duff Cooper: Talleyrand, Oslo 1933
- Arthur Weigall: Nero - Roms keiser, Oslo 1932
- Stephan Zweig: Joseph Fouché - portrett av et politisk menneske, Oslo 1930
- Jules Verne: En verdensomseiling under havet, Oslo 1930
- E. Phillips Oppenheim: Gullfuglen, Oslo 1929
- Georg Popoff: Dagligliv i Sovjetrusland, Kristiania, 1924.
External links