Category: Eliasdatter, Ingeborg

Census Sunday: Ancestors in 1801 Norway

This week’s new theme (because I love alliteration) is Census Sunday. And while I could choose from a multitude of U.S. census records, for this one I’m going to travel to our Norwegian homeland and the 1801 census that took place there. The Digitalarkivet, available online from the National Archives of Norway, has proven to be invaluable in filling out some of our family tree branches. Here are two examples.

First up are my 5G-grandparents, Jacob Arnesen and Ingeborg (Eliasdatter) Rodberg. In 1801 they were living in Innvik, in the Sogn og Fjordane area of Norway.1 The household was on the Rodberg farm. What looks to us like a surname was in fact the name of the farm where the family lived, though often this name did become a family’s chosen surname after emigration to America. In 1801 that household consisted of:

  • Jacob Arnesen, 46
  • Ingebor Eliasdtr, 44
  • Pernille Jacobsdtr, 17
  • Dorthe Jacobsdtr, 9
  • Mari Jacobsdtr, 5
  • Arne Arnesen, 27
  • Dorthe Andersdtr, 72

My Norwegian skills are nonexistent, but the Digitalarkivet provides a handy transcription of the Norwegian text, and I can Google. There is also this useful Norwegian vocabulary list provided by FamilySearch. With these tools, we learn that Jacob was the “husbonde,” or head of household and a “bonde og gaardbeboer,” or farmer and farm dweller. He is marriage to Ingeborg was a first marriage for both. Pernille, Dorthe, and Mari were all children of Jacob and Ingeborg; all were single.

Arne Arnesen, as you might expect from the fact that both he and Jacob used the patronymic “Arnesen,” was Jacob’s brother. His occupation, abbreviated “Nat. soldat,” indicates he was part of the area’s militia. Last in the household was Dorthe Andersdatter. She is listed as Jacob’s mother, and her marital status description, “enke efter 2det ægteskab,” indicates she had been married twice but was now a widow. Her occupation is listed as “inderste,” which apparently means something like a roomer.

Interestingly, my direct ancestor, Arne Jacobson Rodberg, born between Pernille and Dorthe, was not living at home with his parents and siblings but with Andersen Pedersen and Kari Andersdatter. He was fourteen and working as a “tienere,” or servant. Arne would marry Martha Jonsdatter Stauri in 1816, and they would have a daughter named Synneve Arnesdatter. Synneve, who has been mentioned here before, would marry Svend Arnesen Røberg in 1851, and they would be the parents of our immigrant ancestor Anders Mathis (Svendsen), who would take on the surname Roberg in the new country.

Where were Svend Arnesen Røberg’s ancestors in 1801? His mother, Ingeborg Svensdatter, had been born in 1798. Her family was living in the same Innvik parish as Jacob; their household consisted of the following individuals:

  • Svend Larsen, 39
  • Mari Christensdatter, 43
  • Ingebor Svensdatter, 2
  • Siri Svensdatter, 1
  • Jon Olsen, 18
  • Ole Olsen, 13
  • Baarni Olsdatter, 22

Some more fancy Googling reveals additional details. Svend’s marriage to Mari was his second, though this was Mari’s first marriage. Mari appears to have children by a man named Ole, however, as Jon Olsen, Ole Olsen, and Baarni Olsdatter are listed as Svend’s stedbørn, or stepchildren. Like Jacob, Svend was listed as a farmer and farm-dweller. Ingeborg and Siri, ages 2 and 1, are obviously “ugivt,” or single. The farm name I have seen listed for Svend in some sources is Fjellkarstad, but daughter Ingeborg would marry Arne Andersen from the Aland farm in 1824, and their son Svend would take on the Røberg farm/surname. I think my head is starting to spin.

  1. https://www.digitalarkivet.no/en/census/person/pf01058410000551 ↩︎
E Is for…Eliasdatter, Ingeborg

E Is for…Eliasdatter, Ingeborg

Today I’m taking a look at my fifth-great-grandmother, Ingeborg Eliasdatter. It will probably not surprise you to learn she was born in Norway. My Norwegian roots stem from the paternal side of my family; my paternal grandmother was one-half Norwegian. With the vagaries of DNA inheritance, however, I am only 7% Norwegian according to my Ancestry.com DNA test.

Ingeborg was born in about 1757, presumably to a father named Elias, though I have yet to track down more details about him or his wife. Norwegian archives indicate she was born in Hornindal, which was formerly a municipality in Sogn og Fjordane County1. The area was along the eastern edge of the deepest lake in Northern Europe, Lake Hornindalsvatnet2. In 2020 Hornindal merged with Volda and is now part of Møre og Romsdal county.

On 4 July 1784 Ingeborg married Jacob Arnesen Rodberg. He was the son of Arne Rodberg and his wife Dorthe Andersdatter. Jacob and Ingeborg had at least four children: Pernille Jacobsdatter, Arne Jacobsen, Dorthe Jacobsdatter, and Mari Jacobsdatter.3 The 1801 Norwegian census shows the family living in Innvik, Sogn og Fjordane.4 Arne was my fourth-great-grandfather and the grandfather of our immigrant ancestor, Anders Roberg.

Jacob died in Innvik on 14 April 1824, and Ingeborg about 13 months later, on 16 May 1825, also in Innvik.5 She was buried on 20 May.


One final thing, in case you were wondering how to pronounce Ingeborg’s name:

  1. https://www.digitalarkivet.no/* ↩︎
  2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hornindal ↩︎
  3. https://www.digitalarkivet.no/ ↩︎
  4. https://media.digitalarkivet.no/view/58410/5 ↩︎
  5. https://media.digitalarkivet.no/en/view/11509/47678/7 ↩︎