Nic. Stang | |
Birth Name: | Nicolay Milberg Stang |
Birth Date: | 21 April 1908 |
Birth Place: | Kristiansand, Norway |
Occupation: | Art historian |
Spouse: | Ragna Thiis Stang |
Children: | Tove Stang Dahl Nina Thiis Stang |
Nicolay Milberg Stang (21 April 1908 - 15 July 1971) was a Norwegian academic art historian, classical philologist, editor and author. [1]
Nicolay Stang was born at Kristiansand in Vest-Agder County, Norway. He was the son of Johan Ludvig Heyerdahl Stang (1874–1945) and Emilie Charlotte Milberg (1876–1965). He graduated artium from the Hamar Cathedral School in 1926. He earned his cand.philol. in Latin in 1933 from the University of Oslo. [2]
He was a lecturer in the Oslo and Tanum school systems from 1935-38. He was editorial secretary of Fritt Ord from 1936-37. During the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany, Strang was arrested in November 1940 and spent 18 months in solitary confinement at Møllergata 19 in Oslo. Stang was released in April of 1943 with a pledge to abstain from any illegal activities.
He worked in literary pursuits with his wife, Ragna, who managed the legacy of her deceased father, the art historian Jens Thiis. Starting in 1945, he contributed both as a columnist and critic with Arbeiderbladet. He also founded the literary magazine Vinduet and was its first editor from 1947 to 1951. He became dr.philos. in 1957 with his dissertation on Renaissance Florence (Livet og kunsten i ungrenessansens Firenze). Stang received an annual government scholarship starting from 1962.[3]
He was married to art historian Ragna Thiis Stang (1909-78). They were the parents of legal scholar Tove Stang Dahl (1938–93), who married historian Hans Fredrik Dahl, and Nina Thiis Stang (1944–78), who worked for NORAD. His wife and daughter Nina died in a car collision on a road from Nairobi to Mombasa in Kenya on 29 March 1978. [4] [5]