Gyldenpalm (noble family)

Gyldenpalm was a Danish and Norwegian noble family.[1] [2]

Coat-of-arms approved for Hans Hagerup Gyldenpalm, 23 February 1781

Hans Eilersen Hagerup was born 27 October 1717 in Kalundborg, Denmark and died 19 February 1781 at Kristiansand, Norway . He was the son of Eiler Hansen Hagerup (1685–1743) and Anna Catharina Barhow († 1737). His father was Bishop of the Diocese of Nidaros.[3] [4]

After a long career as an official, he became in 1761 General Commissioner of War in Nordland. This automatically gave him personal noble status, belonging to the office nobility (Norwegian: embetsadel, rangadel). On the 23rd of February 1781, four days after his death, he was ennobled under the name Gyldenpalm (lit. Golden Palm). This made also his children and grandchildren noble.[5]

His son Eiler Hagerup Gyldenpalm (1740-1817) became the first to use the surname Gyldenpalm. His grandson, Hans Hagerup Gyldenpalm (1774-1827) was a theologian and nobleman.[6] The family became patrilineally extinct with the death of his grandson, diplomat Andreas Dedekam Hagerup Gyldenpalm (1777–1832).

See also

References

  1. Jon Gunnar Arntzen. "Gyldenpalm". Store norske leksikon. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  2. "Coats of Arms - Scandinavia". Danmarks Adels Aarbog. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  3. Hallgeir Elstad. "Eiler Hagerup". Store norske leksikon. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  4. Jon Gunnar Arntzen. "Hagerup – En slekt som stammer fra Hans Hagerup i Helsingør". Store norske leksikon. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  5. Terje Bratberg. "Hans Hagerup Gyldenpalm". Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  6. "Hans Hagerup Gyldenpalm (1774–1827)". lokalhistoriewiki.no. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
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