Thorsø, Norway Explained

Thorsø
Settlement Type:Village
Pushpin Map:Norway
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Norway
Coordinates:59.1619°N 11.094°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Norway
Subdivision Type1:County
Subdivision Name1:Østfold
Subdivision Type2:Municipality
Subdivision Name2:Fredrikstad
Unit Pref:Metric
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:CET
Utc Offset:+1
Timezone Dst:CEST
Utc Offset Dst:+2
Postal Code:1634

Thorsø or Tose is a farm located in the former municipality of Torsnes (until 1910 part of Borge) in Østfold county, Norway. The first written source found about this farm is from 1472, in the form of Tosowe. This is one of three placenames in Østfold that are believed to derive from Old Norse Þórshof and thus indicate an old location for worshipping the Norse god Thor, a temple or "hof".[1] [2] Jan de Vries pointed out in his work on Germanic religion that although instances of placenames derived from Þórshof are fairly common in Norway, they are all grouped around the Oslofjord.[3]

, the property consisted of 1360ha of land, 108.6ha under cultivation and 650ha woodland.[4] The main house dates to 1900, replacing one destroyed by fire in 1899.[4]

Archaeological discoveries on the farm indicate that settlement there dates back to ancient times and include stone axes and two 12th-century runestones.[5] [6] [7] [8] The first known owner of the property was Alv Haraldsson (Bolt) (d. 1412). Under Oluf Kalips it became an aristocratic estate, and it has since belonged to the Rosenvinge, Bildt, Budde, Sehested and Stang families.[4]

Prominent owners of the Thorsø estate have included war minister Hans Angell Gude, who disappeared from the house mysteriously in the autumn of 1814, thought to have been murdered,[4] [5] and the Norwegian politician and agronomist Kai Møller.[4] Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson wrote his Sigurd Jorsalfar while staying there in 1872.[5]

The estate is the "Lindeby" of a trilogy of historical novels by Ingeborg Møller, whose father's family owned the property: Vårfrost (1931), Lindeby (1933), and Runestenene (1934).[9] [10]

References

  1. [Oluf Rygh]
  2. [Axel Olrik]
  3. [Jan de Vries (linguist)|Jan de Vries]
  4. Terje Bratberg, "Thorsø", Store norske leksikon
  5. Lise and Gustav Thorsø Mohr, Parts of the Thorsø Story, tr. Ann-Sissel Holter, retrieved December 12, 2012.
  6. http://www.kulturminnesok.no/Lokaliteter/OEstfold/Fredrikstad/Thorsoe-i-matr-Tose2 Stone Age settlement site at Thorsø
  7. http://www.kulturminnesok.no/Lokaliteter/OEstfold/Fredrikstad/Thorsoe-i-matr-Tose Iron-Age defences at Thorsø
  8. http://www.kulturminnesok.no/Lokaliteter/OEstfold/Fredrikstad/Thorsoe-i-matr-Tose3 Runestone at Thorsø
  9. Helga Groth, Hovedlinjer i mellomkrigstidens norske litteratur, Humanistiske skrifter 1, Bergen: Grieg, 1947,, p. 216
  10. [Rolv Thesen]

Further reading