Grundtvigs indflydelse på den tidlige danske nationalisme

Grundtvig’s Position in Early Danish NationalismBy Lorenz RerupThe article deals with Grundtvig’s important position in Early Danish nationalism, i.e., in the decades from about 1800 to 1830. The background is the Danish Monarchy from the prosperous years at the turn of the century to the disastrous...

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Published in:Grundtvig-Studier
Main Author: Rerup, Lorenz
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Danish
Published: Grundtvig-Selskabet 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/grs/article/view/16073
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spelling ftsbaarhusojs:oai:ojs.tidsskrift.dk:article/16073 2023-05-15T16:30:39+02:00 Grundtvigs indflydelse på den tidlige danske nationalisme Rerup, Lorenz 1992-01-01 application/pdf https://tidsskrift.dk/grs/article/view/16073 dan dan Grundtvig-Selskabet https://tidsskrift.dk/grs/article/view/16073/13912 https://tidsskrift.dk/grs/article/view/16073 Grundtvig-Studier; Årg. 43 Nr. 1 (1992); 20-32 Grundtvig-Studier; Vol. 43 No. 1 (1992); 20-32 2246-6282 0107-4164 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 1992 ftsbaarhusojs 2021-05-06T20:27:15Z Grundtvig’s Position in Early Danish NationalismBy Lorenz RerupThe article deals with Grundtvig’s important position in Early Danish nationalism, i.e., in the decades from about 1800 to 1830. The background is the Danish Monarchy from the prosperous years at the turn of the century to the disastrous war 1807-1814, the loss of Norway in 1814, and the following needy postwar time. After 1814 the Danish Monarchy consisted of the Kingdom of Denmark, the Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein, the North-Atlantic Islands (the Faeroes and Greenland) and some minor colonies. The ideology which integrated the higher ranks of these heterogeneous ethnic groups of the Monarchy into one society was a patriotism underlining peace and order in the realm, the importance of just government and - before 1807 - the protection provided by the Danish navy.The patriotism of the Monarchy was compatible with various feelings of identity which bred in different parts of it from about 1750. The Danes, living in an old kingdom, equipped with a written language, with a complete educational system, and with a history of their own, of course, had a feeling of a Danish identiy, as the German speaking population of the Duchies had a corresponding feeling of an identity of their own. Clashes of these different identities might happen but were not connected with political ideas. The state was run by the king, not by the people, and a public opinion about politics was not allowed - and was almost non-existent - before the announcement of the Advisory Estates Assemblies in 1831. Now nationalism spread and soon undermined the supranational Monarchy, which finally disintegrated in 1864.However, in the first decades of the 18th century and influenced by the ideas of Romanticism a few poets, first of all Grundtvig, developed a literary national movement without political aims. In the writings of these poets the Danes - the whole people - have a real chance to make history if they abandon their superficial life and revive the virtues and piety of the great periods in Danish history. Like political nationalists these poets propagate this kind of revival. Their attempt failed. People were still divided into a ’high’ and a ’broad’ culture and some decades had to pass until the latter one felt the need of an ideology in order to be integrated into society. Nevertheless, Grundtvig seems to be a kind of link between the patriotic ideology of the 18th and the political nationalism of the 19th century. Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland North Atlantic Aarhus University: OJS at The State and University Library Greenland Norway Grundtvig-Studier 43 1 20 32
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collection Aarhus University: OJS at The State and University Library
op_collection_id ftsbaarhusojs
language Danish
description Grundtvig’s Position in Early Danish NationalismBy Lorenz RerupThe article deals with Grundtvig’s important position in Early Danish nationalism, i.e., in the decades from about 1800 to 1830. The background is the Danish Monarchy from the prosperous years at the turn of the century to the disastrous war 1807-1814, the loss of Norway in 1814, and the following needy postwar time. After 1814 the Danish Monarchy consisted of the Kingdom of Denmark, the Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein, the North-Atlantic Islands (the Faeroes and Greenland) and some minor colonies. The ideology which integrated the higher ranks of these heterogeneous ethnic groups of the Monarchy into one society was a patriotism underlining peace and order in the realm, the importance of just government and - before 1807 - the protection provided by the Danish navy.The patriotism of the Monarchy was compatible with various feelings of identity which bred in different parts of it from about 1750. The Danes, living in an old kingdom, equipped with a written language, with a complete educational system, and with a history of their own, of course, had a feeling of a Danish identiy, as the German speaking population of the Duchies had a corresponding feeling of an identity of their own. Clashes of these different identities might happen but were not connected with political ideas. The state was run by the king, not by the people, and a public opinion about politics was not allowed - and was almost non-existent - before the announcement of the Advisory Estates Assemblies in 1831. Now nationalism spread and soon undermined the supranational Monarchy, which finally disintegrated in 1864.However, in the first decades of the 18th century and influenced by the ideas of Romanticism a few poets, first of all Grundtvig, developed a literary national movement without political aims. In the writings of these poets the Danes - the whole people - have a real chance to make history if they abandon their superficial life and revive the virtues and piety of the great periods in Danish history. Like political nationalists these poets propagate this kind of revival. Their attempt failed. People were still divided into a ’high’ and a ’broad’ culture and some decades had to pass until the latter one felt the need of an ideology in order to be integrated into society. Nevertheless, Grundtvig seems to be a kind of link between the patriotic ideology of the 18th and the political nationalism of the 19th century.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Rerup, Lorenz
spellingShingle Rerup, Lorenz
Grundtvigs indflydelse på den tidlige danske nationalisme
author_facet Rerup, Lorenz
author_sort Rerup, Lorenz
title Grundtvigs indflydelse på den tidlige danske nationalisme
title_short Grundtvigs indflydelse på den tidlige danske nationalisme
title_full Grundtvigs indflydelse på den tidlige danske nationalisme
title_fullStr Grundtvigs indflydelse på den tidlige danske nationalisme
title_full_unstemmed Grundtvigs indflydelse på den tidlige danske nationalisme
title_sort grundtvigs indflydelse på den tidlige danske nationalisme
publisher Grundtvig-Selskabet
publishDate 1992
url https://tidsskrift.dk/grs/article/view/16073
geographic Greenland
Norway
geographic_facet Greenland
Norway
genre Greenland
North Atlantic
genre_facet Greenland
North Atlantic
op_source Grundtvig-Studier; Årg. 43 Nr. 1 (1992); 20-32
Grundtvig-Studier; Vol. 43 No. 1 (1992); 20-32
2246-6282
0107-4164
op_relation https://tidsskrift.dk/grs/article/view/16073/13912
https://tidsskrift.dk/grs/article/view/16073
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