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Ancestor Tables
Swedish American Genealogist Volume 10 Number 4 Article 9 12-1-1990 Ancestor Tables Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.augustana.edu/swensonsag Part of the Genealogy Commons, and the Scandinavian Studies Commons Recommended Citation (1990) "Ancestor Tables," Swedish American Genealogist: Vol. 10 : No. 4 , Article 9. Available at: https://digitalcommons.augustana.edu/swensonsag/vol10/iss4/9 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center at Augustana Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Swedish American Genealogist by an authorized editor of Augustana Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. (ISSN 0275-9314) Swedis•h American Genealo ist A journal devoted to Swedish American biography, genealogy and personal history CONTENTS Repositories of Scandinavian-American Materials: A Partial Directory 162 Swedes in the Naturalization Index - A Sampling 170 John Root Once More 178 A Swedish Bible Inscription 185 When Andrew Jackson Helped a Swedish(?) Tailor 186 Brodd-Jonas and Brodd-Marta: Two Bishop Hill Colonists Identified 188 Charles XII in America 190 Ancestor Tables 191 Genealogical Queries 194 What Happened to John Asplund's New Collections? 201 Index of Personal Names 203 Index of Place Names 219 Index of Ships' Names 224 Vol. X December 1990 No. 4 1 l • • ,-1. 1I Swedish America~ Genealogist Copyright © 1990 Swedish American Genealogist P.O. Box 2186 Winter Park. FL 32790 Tel. (407) 647-4292 (ISSN 0275-9314) Editor and Publisher Ni ls William Olsson, Ph.D .. F.A.S.G. I Contributing Editors Glen E. Brolander, Augustana College, Rock Is land, IL I l Peter Stebbins Craig, J .D. -
A Walkabout Around Historical Blasieholmen and Nybroviken in Stockholm Along the Baltic Sea Water Inlet to Stockholm
A Walkabout around historical Blasieholmen and Nybroviken in Stockholm along the Baltic Sea water inlet to Stockholm. Our walkabout will start at Kungsträdgården (King’s Garden) and continue along the streets around Blasieholmen towards Nybroviken (New Bridge Bay), where we will view many objects of interests. We will receive more value from the walkabout if we develop a better un- derstanding of the local history of an area when we are viewing the many visual objects. Area around Blasieholmen and Nybroviken Photo: Arlid Vågen I’m arriving at Kungsträdgården Metro Station (1), located in the district of Norrmalm. The platform is located approximately 115ft (34m) under ground. During the exit from the metro station I see several relics rescued from the many buildings demolished, during the some- times tragic redevelopment period of central Stockholm during the period of the 1950s and 1960s. I continue walking along the Birgit Nils- son Allè towards the Stockholm Ström water- front area. Birgit Nilsson was the Swedish world known dramatic opera soprano excelling Walking map for this Walkabout in Wagner style operas. The park Kungsträdgården is divided into four distinct spaces: Square of Charles XII; Molin’s Fountain; Square of Charles XIII and “Fountain of Wolodarski”. My absolute favorite is Charles XII statue, on my right in the middle of the park, with his arm pointing eastward. The story is that he had some un- finished business with the Russians (what’s new...). During the spring time Kungsträdgården presents a stunning view of flower- ing cherry blossoms for the visitor. I soon arrive at Stockholm Ström and see the Royal Castle to my right across the water and the famous Grand Hotel (2) and Nationalmuseum (3) to my left. -
Stockholm's Archipelago and Strindberg's
Scandinavica Vol 52 No 2 2013 Stockholm’s Archipelago and Strindberg’s: Historical Reality and Modern Myth-Making Massimo Ciaravolo University of Florence Abstract The Stockholm Archipelago is ubiquitous in the prose, poetry, drama and non-fiction of August Strindberg. This article examines the interaction in Strindberg’s oeuvre between the city of Stockholm as civilized space and the wild space surrounding it, tracing the development of a literary myth of Eden in his work. Strindberg’s representations of the shifting relations between city and nature, it is argued, played (and still play) an important role in the cultural construction of mythologies of the loss of the wild space. The environments described in Strindberg’s texts are subject to changes, shifts and repetitions with variations, such that the archipelago in itself can be read as a mirror of the polyphony of points of view, the variability and the ambiguities we find in his oeuvre at large. Keywords August Strindberg, Stockholm Archipelago, city in literature, nature in literature, mythologies 52 Scandinavica Vol 52 No 2 2013 August Strindberg’s home town of Stockholm, together with its wilder counterpart, the archipelago or skärgård (literally meaning group, or circle, of islands and skerries), plays a large part in Strindberg’s literary universe as well as in his life. The archipelago is ubiquitous in his oeuvre; it occurs in prose as well as in poetry and in drama, and it characterizes both fiction, autobiography and non-fiction (essays, letters and diaries). It can sometimes provide the setting to whole works, but in a series of other works it can be included as one of the settings, or even be mentioned peripherally. -
Crawford County, Michigan, Naturalization Index
CRAWFORD COUNTY NATURALIZATION INDEX Last Name First Name Middle Name First Paper Second Paper Ackerman Christopher A. V1 P1 Adamson William Buttle V3 P13 Ahman Frank Oscar V8 P15 Ahman Frank Oscar V2 P13 Ahrman Frank Oscar V7 P15 Alman Frank Oscar/Theodore V2 P13 Almon Mary Stephanie V11 P27 V11 P27 Almon Mary Stephanie V10 P159 Andereson Hans V3 P50 Andersen Hans V3 P50 Andersen Hilmas V1 P237 Andersen Jacob V1 P246 Andersen Soren V8 P40 Andersenn George V1 P243 Anderson August V1 P113 Anderson Charles V1 P134 Anderson Charles Ludwig V1 P39 Anderson Emil V1 P227 Anderson G V1 P243 Anderson George V7 P5 Anderson George V8 P5 Anderson Gust V5 P45 Anderson Gust V1 P154 Anderson Hans V1 P7 Anderson Hans Frederick V1 P35 Anderson Hilmar V1 P237 Anderson Israel V1 P3 Anderson Jacob V1 P246 Monday, July 22, 2002 Page 1 of 46 Last Name First Name Middle Name First Paper Second Paper Anderson John FP V5 P52 Anderson Karl V1 P147 Anderson Lassis A. V1 P21 Anderson Piven V1 P145 Anderson Sam V5 P115 Anderson Soren V8 40 Anderson Soren V1 P170 Anderson Soren V7 P40 Andersson George V1 P243 Andeson August V1 P131 Annette Jospeh L. V1 P90 Annis Hella Waili V10 P149 Annis Hella Walli V11 P24 V11 P24 Anstett Francis Louis V9 P5 V9 P5 Anthony Charles V1 P246 Appellery Oscar Edmund V2 P87 Appellury Oscar Edward V2 P87 Arenbren Hans Peter V1 P169 Arldsen Peter V1 P73 Armerson William John V1 P83 Armstrong James V9 P38 V9 P38 Armstrong James V3 P19 Arnold Alexander V1 P162 Arnold Erika V11 P20 Arnold Erika Luise V10 P142 Atkinson Marshall Alexander V9 P42 V9 P42 Atkinson Marshall Alexander V2 P97 Baddy Silas V1 P104 Badore Angnus V1 P182 Bandy Frank JR V5 P97 Monday, July 22, 2002 Page 2 of 46 Last Name First Name Middle Name First Paper Second Paper Banfield James V4 P180 Banney John V1 P152 Barber Charles V1 P53 Barber Charles Sidney V7 P28 Barber Charles Sidney V2 P31 Barber Charles Sidney V8 P28 Barber Chas V5 P34 Barber Ernest Roy V9 P27 Barber Fred E. -
Bart Pushaw for Display in Paris at the World’S Fair That Same Year
Sámi, Indigeneity, and In 1900, the Swedish artist Karl Nordström painted a connection with the natural world, citing the declaration colossal landscape of a place he had never been.1 Unlike of Swedish poet Verner von Heidenstam that “it is the many of his other landscape paintings, this new work was primitive that we city dwellers seek in the rural areas during the Boundaries of Nordic not supposed to be a “landscape of the soul.” Instead, the summer, the primitive and its peace.”3 Large tracts of Nordström was working under the commission of the wilderness and a historically low population density in the National Romanticism Luossavaara-Kiirunavaara Aktiebolag (LKAB), a mining Nordic countries had long fostered an intimate connection company founded in 1890 to extract iron ore from between humankind and the natural world. Only in the northernmost Sweden. His task was to paint a panoramic late nineteenth century did Nordic urbanites consider this view over the pristine, steppe-like landscape of Kiirunavaara relationship under threat from rapid industrialization. Bart Pushaw for display in Paris at the World’s Fair that same year. At the display, Nordström’s painting was encircled by a wooden Nordic peoples and artists sought to reclaim this connection frame bearing the names of the sites of the company’s new with nature by tracing the roots of their character, chiselled mining ventures: Gällivare, Luossavaara, and Kiirunavaara by their resilience in a harsh climate, specifically to their (fig. 1). Below the painting were geological samples of native land. Art historians have routinely argued that while local iron and other minerals found in the region. -
FEEFHS Journal Volume 15, 2007
FEEFHS Journal Volume 15, 2007 FEEFHS Journal Who, What and Why is FEEFHS? The Federation of East European Family History Societies Guest Editor: Kahlile B. Mehr. [email protected] (FEEFHS) was founded in June 1992 by a small dedicated group of Managing Editor: Thomas K. Edlund American and Canadian genealogists with diverse ethnic, religious, and national backgrounds. By the end of that year, eleven societies FEEFHS Executive Council had accepted its concept as founding members. Each year since then FEEFHS has grown in size. FEEFHS now represents nearly two 2006-2007 FEEFHS officers: hundred organizations as members from twenty-four states, five Ca- President: Dave Obee, 4687 Falaise Drive, Victoria, BC V8Y 1B4 nadian provinces, and fourteen countries. It continues to grow. Canada. [email protected] About half of these are genealogy societies, others are multi- 1st Vice-president: Brian J. Lenius. [email protected] purpose societies, surname associations, book or periodical publish- 2nd Vice-president: Lisa A. Alzo ers, archives, libraries, family history centers, online services, insti- 3rd Vice-president: Werner Zoglauer tutions, e-mail genealogy list-servers, heraldry societies, and other Secretary: Kahlile Mehr, 412 South 400 West, Centerville, UT. ethnic, religious, and national groups. FEEFHS includes organiza- [email protected] tions representing all East or Central European groups that have ex- Treasurer: Don Semon. [email protected] isting genealogy societies in North America and a growing group of worldwide organizations and individual members, from novices to Other members of the FEEFHS Executive Council: professionals. Founding Past President: Charles M. Hall, 4874 S. 1710 East, Salt Lake City, UT 84117-5928 Goals and Purposes: Immediate Past President: Irmgard Hein Ellingson, P.O. -
Save the Date Join
WINTER 2015 changing lives, one child at a time. CSI Team Travels to Bangladesh for Teaching Mission In this Issue In 2010 Fazly Alahi, a native of Bangladesh currently CSI Travels to Bangladesh 1 living and working in Minnesota with his family, contacted Children’s Surgery International. He had Welcome, Dr. Sidman 2 a dream to make a connection between the United CSI Welcomes New Medical 3 States and Bangladesh that could bring much- Director, David Tetzlaff needed medical care and education to his home country. After a site visit, CSI chose Rangpur Thank You to Departing 3 Community Medical College Hospital in the northern Board Members region of the country. Partner Program: Vietnam 4 The first surgical mission traveled to Rangpur in 2011. Edina Couple Transform 4 The trip was a great success, performing many cleft- Young Lives related procedures and identifying the educational needs of local professionals. CSI’s partnership 2015 Mission Calendar 5 with Fazly and his family, as well as the Rangpur Fazly Alahi Thank You to CSI Donors 6-7 Community Medical College Hospital, provided crucial support to our team. The CSI medical team worked closely alongside local professionals, teaching and learning from one another. A second successful mission was completed in 2013. CSI hopes to send two mission teams to Bangladesh in 2015. Our teams will focus on promotion of self-sufficiency through hands-on training, education, and collaboration with local health save the date professionals. This year, CSI volunteer surgeons and nurses will implement site-specific educational curriculum during our stay in Rangpur. -
INTERNATIONAL GEMMOLOGICAL CONFERENCE Nantes - France INTERNATIONAL GEMMOLOGICAL August 2019 CONFERENCE Nantes - France August 2019
IGC 2019 - Nantes IGC 2019 INTERNATIONAL GEMMOLOGICAL CONFERENCE Nantes - France INTERNATIONAL GEMMOLOGICAL August 2019 CONFERENCE Nantes - France www.igc-gemmology.org August 2019 36th IGC 2019 – Nantes, France Introduction 36th International Gemmological Conference IGC August 2019 Nantes, France Dear colleagues of IGC, It is our great pleasure and pride to welcome you to the 36th International Gemmological Conference in Nantes, France. Nantes has progressively gained a reputation in the science of gemmology since Prof. Bernard Lasnier created the Diplôme d’Université de Gemmologie (DUG) in the early 1980s. Several DUGs or PhDs have since made a name for themselves in international gemmology. In addition, the town of Nantes has been on several occasions recognized as a very attractive, green town, with a high quality of life. This regional capital is also an important hub for the industry (e.g. agriculture, aeronautics), education and high-tech. It has only recently developed tourism even if has much to offer, with its historical downtown, the beginning of the Loire river estuary, and the ocean close by. The organizers of 36th International Gemmological Conference wish you a pleasant and rewarding conference Dr. Emmanuel Fritsch, Dr. Nathalie Barreau, Féodor Blumentritt MsC. The organizers of the 36th International Gemmological Conference in Nantes, France From left to right Dr. Emmanuel Fritsch, Dr. Nathalie Barreau, Féodor Blumentritt MsC. 3 36th IGC 2019 – Nantes, France Introduction Organization of the 36th International Gemmological Conference Organizing Committee Dr. Emmanuel Fritsch (University of Nantes) Dr. Nathalie Barreau (IMN-CNRS) Feodor Blumentritt Dr. Jayshree Panjikar (IGC Executive Secretary) IGC Executive Committee Excursions Sophie Joubert, Richou, Cholet Hervé Renoux, Richou, Cholet Guest Programme Sophie Joubert, Richou, Cholet Homepage Dr. -
Georg Pauli – En Kulturpolitisk Skribent Och Debattör
Georg Pauli – en kulturpolitisk skribent och debattör Per Ljungberg Ämne: Litteraturvetenskap Nivå: Master Poäng: 15 hp Ventilerad: VT 2012 Handledare: Björn Sundberg Litteraturvetenskapliga institutionen Uppsatser inom litteraturvetenskap Uppsatser inom retorik 1(47 ) Innehåll Inledning ................................................................................................................................................ 3 Teoretiska och metodologiska utgångspunkter .................................................................................. 6 Forskningsöversikt ............................................................................................................................. 8 Historisk bakgrund ............................................................................................................................. 9 Georg Pauli ...................................................................................................................................... 12 Georg Paulis estetiska idévärld. ........................................................................................................... 16 Vi äga ej Konstpolitik i mening af ESTETISK EKONOMI!! ........................................................ 17 Det moderna museiväsendet ............................................................................................................ 21 Reduktion och syntes! ...................................................................................................................... 25 flamman .............................................................................................................................................. -
Volume 25 / No. 3 / 1996
he Journa TGemmolog Volume 25 No. 3 July 1996 f~J J The Gemmological Association and Gem Testing Laboratory of Great Britain President E.M. Bruton Vice-Presidents AE. Farn, D.G. Kent, RK. Mitchell Honorary Fellows R.T. Liddicoat [nr., E. Miles, K. Nassau Honorary Life Members D.}. Callaghan, E.A Iobbins, H. Tillander Council of Management CR Cavey, T.}. Davidson, N.W. Deeks, RR Harding, 1.Thomson, v.P. Watson Members' Council AJ. Allnutt, P. Dwyer-Hickey, R. Fuller, B. Jackson, J. Kessler, G. Monnickendam, L. Music, J.B. Nelson, K. Penton, P.G. Read, 1. Roberts, R Shepherd, CH. Winter Branch Chairmen Midlands: J.W. Porter North West: 1. Knight Scottish: J. Thomson Examiners AJ. Allnutt, M.Sc., Ph.D., FGS S.M. Anderson, B.SdHonst FGA L. Bartlett, B.Sc., M.Phil., FGA, DGA E.M. Bruton, FGA, DGA CR. Cavey, FGA S. Coelho, B.Sc., FGA, DGA AT. Collins, B.Sc., Ph.D. AG. Good, FGA, DGA CJ.E. Hall, B.Sc.(Hons), FGA G.M. Howe, FGA, DGA G.H. Jones, B.5c., Ph.D., FGA H.L. Plumb, B.Sc., FGA, DGA RD. Ross, B.Sc., FGA DGA P.A. Sadler, B.Sc., FGA, DGA E. Stem, FGA, DGA Prof. 1. Sunagawa, D.Sc. M. Tilley, GG, FGA CM. Woodward, B.5c., FGA DGA The Gemmological Association and Gem Testing Laboratory of Great Britain 27 Greville Street, London EC1N 8SU Telephone: 0171-404 3334 Fax: 0171-404 8843 j*3fr \ St TGemmologhe Journal of y QAQTT. VOLUME 25 NUMBER 3 JULY 1996 Editor Dr R.R. -
Volume 35 / No. 7 / 2017
GemmologyThe Journal of Volume 35 / No. 7 / 2017 The Gemmological Association of Great Britain Contents GemmologyThe Journal of Volume 35 / No. 7 / 2017 COLUMNS p. 581 569 What’s New AMS2 melee diamond tester| p. 586 MiNi photography system| Spectra diamond colorimeter| Lab Information Circular| Gemmological Society of Japan abstracts|Bead-cultured blister pearls from Pinctada maculata|Rubies from Cambo- dia and Thailand|Goldsmiths’ S. Bruce-Lockhart photo Review|Topaz and synthetic moissanite imitating rough diamonds|Santa Fe Symposium proceedings|Colour-change ARTICLES glass imitating garnet rough| Thanh Nhan Bui photo M2M diamond-origin tracking service|More historical reading Feature Articles lists 598 The Linkage Between Garnets Found in India at the 572 Gem Notes Arikamedu Archaeological Site and Their Source at Cat’s-eye aquamarine from Meru, the Garibpet Deposit Kenya|Colour-zoned beryl from By Karl Schmetzer, H. Albert Gilg, Ulrich Schüssler, Jayshree Pakistan|Coloration of green dravite from Tanzania|Enstatite Panjikar, Thomas Calligaro and Patrick Périn from Emali, Kenya|Grossular from Tanga, Tanzania|Natrolite 628 Simultaneous X-Radiography, Phase-Contrast from Portugal|Large matrix opal and Darkfield Imaging to Separate Natural from carving|Sapphires from Tigray, Cultured Pearls northern Ethiopia|Whewellite from the Czech Republic| By Michael S. Krzemnicki, Carina S. Hanser and Vincent Revol Inclusions in sunstone feldspar from Norway and topaz from Sri 640 Camels, Courts and Financing the French Blue Lanka|Quartz with a tourmaline -
Travelling in a Palimpsest
MARIE-SOFIE LUNDSTRÖM Travelling in a Palimpsest FINNISH NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTERS’ ENCOUNTERS WITH SPANISH ART AND CULTURE TURKU 2007 Cover illustration: El Vito: Andalusian Dance, June 1881, drawing in pencil by Albert Edelfelt ISBN 978-952-12-1869-9 (digital version) ISBN 978-952-12-1868-2 (printed version) Painosalama Oy Turku 2007 Pre-print of a forthcoming publication with the same title, to be published by the Finnish Academy of Science and Letters, Humaniora, vol. 343, Helsinki 2007 ISBN 978-951-41-1010-8 CONTENTS PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. 5 INTRODUCTION . 11 Encountering Spanish Art and Culture: Nineteenth-Century Espagnolisme and Finland. 13 Methodological Issues . 14 On the Disposition . 17 Research Tools . 19 Theoretical Framework: Imagining, Experiencing ad Remembering Spain. 22 Painter-Tourists Staging Authenticity. 24 Memories of Experiences: The Souvenir. 28 Romanticism Against the Tide of Modernity. 31 Sources. 33 Review of the Research Literature. 37 1 THE LURE OF SPAIN. 43 1.1 “There is no such thing as the Pyrenees any more”. 47 1.1.1 Scholarly Sojourns and Romantic Travelling: Early Journeys to Spain. 48 1.1.2 Travelling in and from the Periphery: Finnish Voyagers . 55 2 “LES DIEUX ET LES DEMI-DIEUX DE LA PEINTURE” . 59 2.1 The Spell of Murillo: The Early Copies . 62 2.2 From Murillo to Velázquez: Tracing a Paradigm Shift in the 1860s . 73 3 ADOLF VON BECKER AND THE MANIÈRE ESPAGNOLE. 85 3.1 The Parisian Apprenticeship: Copied Spanishness . 96 3.2 Looking at WONDERS: Becker at the Prado. 102 3.3 Costumbrista Painting or Manière Espagnole? .