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==Career==
==Career==
[[File:Gunnar Isachsen1.jpg|thumb|right|Isachsen after the ''Fram'' expedition]]
[[File:Gunnar Isachsen1.jpg|thumb|right|Isachsen after the ''Fram'' expedition]]
Isachsen was made a [[first lieutenant]] in the Norwegian [[cavalry]] in 1891. Gymnastics and sports keenly interested Isachsen, and he graduated from the gymnasium Central School in 1898, also taking courses at the Marine Observatory in [[Wilhelmshaven]] and the marine research in [[Bergen]].
Isachsen was made a [[first lieutenant]] in the Norwegian [[cavalry]] in 1891. Gymnastics and sports keenly interested Isachsen, and he graduated from the gymnasium Central School in 1898, also taking courses at the Marine Observatory in [[Wilhelmshaven]] and the marine research in [[Bergen]].


From 1898 to 1902, Isachsen was [[Topography as the study of place|topographer]] on [[Otto Sverdrup]]'s ''[[Fram]]'' expedition to the [[Canadian Arctic Archipelago|Arctic archipelago]].<ref>{{cite journal|date=March 1920|title=Recent Norwegian Scientific Exploration in the Interior|journal=Scientific American monthly|publisher=Scientific American Pub. Co.|volume=1|issue=Digitized Jun 3, 2009|pages=234|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=yatDAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA243&dq=Gunnar+Isachsen&ei=k__7SuzFM4SWzAT7z4WZDw&client=firefox-a#v=onepage&q=Gunnar%20Isachsen&f=false}}</ref> During this voyage, he was promoted to [[Rittmeister]] in 1899, and mapped large areas of hitherto unknown islands in [[Northern Canada]], mainly by long sledge journeys. These included [[Ellef Ringnes Island]], [[King Christian Island]].<ref name="encyclopedia">{{cite book|last=Mills|first=William James |title=Exploring polar frontiers: a historical encyclopedia|publisher=ABC-CLIO|year=2003|volume=2|pages=209|isbn=1-57607-422-6|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=PYdBH4dOOM4C&pg=PA209&dq=Gunnar+Isachsen&as_brr=3&ei=iAH8SqerCqO8zgS2ydHdDg&client=firefox-a#v=onepage&q=Gunnar%20Isachsen&f=false}}</ref>
From 1898 to 1902, Isachsen was [[Topography as the study of place|topographer]] on [[Otto Sverdrup]]'s ''[[Fram (ship)|Fram]]'' expedition to the [[Canadian Arctic Archipelago|Arctic archipelago]].<ref>{{cite journal|date=March 1920|title=Recent Norwegian Scientific Exploration in the Interior|journal=Scientific American Monthly|publisher=Scientific American Pub. Co.|volume=1|issue=Digitized Jun 3, 2009|pages=234|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yatDAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA243}}</ref> During this voyage, he was promoted to [[Rittmeister|Rittmester]] in 1899, and mapped large areas of hitherto unknown islands in [[Northern Canada]], mainly by long sledge journeys. These included [[Ellef Ringnes Island]], [[King Christian Island]].<ref name="encyclopedia">{{cite book|last=Mills|first=William James |title=Exploring polar frontiers: a historical encyclopedia|publisher=ABC-CLIO|year=2003|volume=2|pages=209|isbn=1-57607-422-6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PYdBH4dOOM4C&pg=PA209}}</ref>


From 1903 to 1905, he participated in the French military service in [[Algeria]] and [[Paris]]. From 1906 to 1910, he led topographic and [[bathymetric]] research expeditions at [[Svalbard]].<ref name="geologyofsvalbard">{{cite book|last=Harland|first=Walter Brian |coauthors=Lester M. Anderson, Daoud Manasrah, Nicholas J. Butterfield|title=The geology of Svalbard|editor=Walter Brian Harland|publisher=Geological Society|year=1997|pages=16|isbn=1-897799-93-4|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=cv-V7cOWX8cC&pg=PA16&dq=Gunnar+Isachsen&lr=&as_brr=3&ei=BQb8SoC8DJu0zASZ4LSjDw&client=firefox-a#v=onepage&q=Gunnar%20Isachsen&f=false}}</ref> These expeditions were paid for by [[Albert I, Prince of Monaco|Prince Albert of Monaco]].
From 1903 to 1905, he participated in the French military service in [[Algeria]] and [[Paris]]. From 1906 to 1910, he led topographic and [[bathymetric]] research expeditions at [[Svalbard]].<ref name="geologyofsvalbard">{{cite book|last=Harland|first=Walter Brian |author2=Lester M. Anderson |author3=Daoud Manasrah |author4=Nicholas J. Butterfield |title=The geology of Svalbard|editor=Walter Brian Harland|publisher=Geological Society|year=1997|pages=16|isbn=1-897799-93-4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cv-V7cOWX8cC&pg=PA16}}</ref> These expeditions were paid for by [[Albert I, Prince of Monaco|Prince Albert of Monaco]].


Isachsen led his own government-financed expeditions to [[Spitsbergen]] in 1909 and 1910. As a result of these expeditions, he founded the Norwegian systematic research work on Svalbard. In 1911, Isachsen was on assignment in Russia and Japan. Three years later, a fire destroyed his house in Asker, and with it all his maps and records and maps. He served as a regular salaried officer to 1917. He was the Norwegian government's technical delegate to the Svalbard Treaty of Paris in 1914 and the [[Paris Peace Conference, 1919|Paris Peace Conference in 1919]].
Isachsen led his own government-financed expeditions to [[Spitsbergen]] in 1909 and 1910. As a result of these expeditions, he founded the Norwegian systematic research work on Svalbard. In 1911, Isachsen was on assignment in Russia and Japan. Three years later, a fire destroyed his house in Asker, and with it all his maps and records. He served as a regular salaried officer to 1917. He was the Norwegian government's technical delegate to the Svalbard Treaty of Paris in 1914 and the [[Paris Peace Conference, 1919|Paris Peace Conference in 1919]].


Isachsen visited the [[Faroe Islands]] and [[Iceland]] in 1922. In 1923, he became the Director of the Norwegian Maritime Museum in Oslo,<ref name="snlno"/><ref name="npolar" /> and in 1923 and 1924, he took part in expeditions to [[East Greenland]] . He was promoted to Major in 1924, and participated in a special whaling mission to the [[Ross Sea]] in 1926-27. He was the government's whaling inspector in the [[Southern Ocean]] in 1929-30, and the leader of the fourth ''Norvegia'' expedition circumnavigating the [[South Pole]] in 1930-31.<ref name="encyclopedia" />
Isachsen visited the [[Faroe Islands]] and [[Iceland]] in 1922. In 1923, he became the Director of the Norwegian Maritime Museum in Oslo,<ref name="snlno"/><ref name="npolar" /> and in 1923 and 1924, he took part in expeditions to [[East Greenland]] . He was promoted to Major in 1924, and participated in a special whaling mission to the [[Ross Sea]] in 1926–27. He was the government's whaling inspector in the [[Southern Ocean]] in 1929–30, and the leader of the fourth ''Norvegia'' expedition circumnavigating the [[South Pole]] in 1930–31.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=PYdBH4dOOM4C&pg=PA145 Mills, p. 145]</ref>


==Personal life==
==Personal life==
[[image:Isachsen-1974-bw-1b.jpg|thumb|right|Welcome sign at Canada's Isachsen research station, 1974]]
[[image:Isachsen-1974-bw-1b.jpg|thumb|right|Welcome sign at Canada's Isachsen research station, 1974]]
Isachsen married Signe Amalie Eide (1876–1911) in 1903. Signehamna harbour in Svalbard is named in her honour.<ref name="npolar">{{cite web|url=http://cruise-handbook.npolar.no/en/kongsfjorden/signehamna.html|title=Signehamna [79° 16.4' N 11° 33' E]|last=Johansen|first= Bjørn Fossli |coauthors=Jørn Henriksen, Øystein Overrein, Kristin Prestvold|publisher=Norwegian Polar Institute|accessdate=2009-11-12}}</ref> They had three children (Fridtjov, Nils, and Gerd). His second marriage, in 1916, was to Marie Sophie Louisa Steenstrup (1884–1958).<ref name="snlno" /> They had five children (Kjell, Inger, Karen, Odd, and Finn); Odd Isachsen is still living.<ref name="ssf.npolar.no">{{cite news|url=http://www.ssf.npolar.no/pages/news018.htm|title=100 years of systematic Norwegian research in Svalbard|date=9 June 2006|work=ssf.npolar.no|publisher=Svalbard Science Forum|accessdate=2009-11-12}}</ref> Through his second marriage, Gunnar Isachsen was a brother-in-law of [[Hjalmar Steenstrup]].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title=Hjalmar Steenstrup |encyclopedia=[[Norsk biografisk leksikon]]|first=Inger |last=Døving |editor=[[Knut Helle|Helle, Knut]]|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|url=http://www.snl.no/.nbl_biografi/Hjalmar_Steenstrup/utdypning|language=Norwegian|accessdate=15 December 2009}}</ref>
Isachsen married Signe Amalie Eide (1876–1911) in 1903. [[Signehamna]] harbour in Svalbard is named in her honour.<ref name="npolar">{{cite web|url=http://cruise-handbook.npolar.no/en/kongsfjorden/signehamna.html|title=Signehamna [79° 16.4' N 11° 33' E]|last=Johansen|first= Bjørn Fossli |author2=Jørn Henriksen |author3=Øystein Overrein |author4=Kristin Prestvold |publisher=Norwegian Polar Institute|accessdate=2009-11-12}}</ref> They had three children (Fridtjov, Nils, and Gerd). His second marriage, in 1916, was to Marie Sophie Louisa Steenstrup (1884–1958).<ref name="snlno" /> They had five children (Kjell, Inger, Karen, Odd, and Finn); Odd Isachsen is still living.<ref name="ssf.npolar.no">{{cite news|url=http://www.ssf.npolar.no/pages/news018.htm|title=100 years of systematic Norwegian research in Svalbard|date=9 June 2006|work=ssf.npolar.no|publisher=Svalbard Science Forum|accessdate=2009-11-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110722063458/http://www.ssf.npolar.no/pages/news018.htm|archive-date=22 July 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> Through his second marriage, Gunnar Isachsen was a brother-in-law of [[Hjalmar Steenstrup]].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title=Hjalmar Steenstrup |encyclopedia=[[Norsk biografisk leksikon]]|first=Inger |last=Døving |editor=Helle, Knut |editor-link=Knut Helle |publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|url=http://www.snl.no/.nbl_biografi/Hjalmar_Steenstrup/utdypning|language=Norwegian|accessdate=15 December 2009}}</ref>


In 1903, he was knighted 1st Class of the [[Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav|Order of St. Olav]], and was commander of the Cross 2nd Class in 1931. He held the [[HM The King's Medal of Merit|King's Medal of Merit]] in gold (1912), as well as a number of foreign orders and medals.
In 1903, he was knighted 1st Class of the [[Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav|Order of St. Olav]], and was commander of the Cross 2nd Class in 1931. He held the [[HM The King's Medal of Merit|King's Medal of Merit]] in gold (1912), as well as a number of foreign orders and medals.
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* [[Isachsen, Nunavut]], [[Canada]], a now abandoned remote [[Arctic]] research station on the western shore of [[Ellef Ringnes Island]] in the [[Sverdrup Islands]], was named in his honour in April 1948.<ref name="encyclopedia" />
* [[Isachsen, Nunavut]], [[Canada]], a now abandoned remote [[Arctic]] research station on the western shore of [[Ellef Ringnes Island]] in the [[Sverdrup Islands]], was named in his honour in April 1948.<ref name="encyclopedia" />
* He was depicted on a [[List of people on stamps of Norway|Norwegian postage stamp]] in 2006 on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the exploration of Svalbard.
* He was depicted on a [[List of people on stamps of Norway|Norwegian postage stamp]] in 2006 on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the exploration of Svalbard.
* [[Isachsen Mountain]], south-east of [[Mount Bergersen]] in the [[Sør Rondane Mountains]], is named for Maj. Gunnar Isachsen, who was the leader with Captain [[Hjalmar Riiser-Larsen]] of the Norwegian expedition to this area in 1930-31.
* [[Isachsen Mountain]], south-east of [[Mount Bergersen]] in the [[Sør Rondane Mountains]], is named for Maj. Gunnar Isachsen, who was the leader with Captain [[Hjalmar Riiser-Larsen]] of the Norwegian expedition to this area in 1930–31.
* 1931, Charles P. Daly Medal<ref name="amergeog">{{cite web|url=http://www.amergeog.org/honorslist.pdf|title=The Charles P. Daly|work=amergeog.org|pages=6|accessdate=2009-11-15}}</ref>
*The [[plateau glacier]] [[Isachsenfonna]] on [[Spitsbergen]], [[Svalbard]], a glacier he traversed in 1906, is named after him.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://placenames.npolar.no/stadnamn/Isachsenfonna|title=Isachsenfonna (Svalbard) |publisher=[[Norwegian Polar Institute]] |accessdate=4 March 2013}}</ref>
* 1931, Charles P. Daly Medal<ref name="amergeog">{{cite web|url=http://www.amergeog.org/honorslist.pdf|title=The Charles P. Daly|work=amergeog.org|pages=6|accessdate=2009-11-15|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090704200812/http://www.amergeog.org/honorslist.pdf|archivedate=2009-07-04}}</ref>


==Partial works==
==Partial works==
* Isachsen, G. (1907). ''Astronomical and geodetical observations. Report of the second Norwegian Arctic expedition in the 'Fram''', no. 5 = vol. 2. Kristiania: A.W. Brøgger.
* Isachsen, G. (1907). ''Astronomical and geodetical observations. Report of the second Norwegian Arctic expedition in the 'Fram''', no. 5 = vol. 2. Kristiania: A.W. Brøgger.
* Isachsen, G. (1913). ''Exploration du Nord-Ouest du Spitsberg entreprise sous les ausp. de S.A.C. le Prince de Monaco par la mission Isachsen 2 Description du champ dóperation''. Monaco: Impr. de Monaco.
* Isachsen, G. (1913). {{lang|fr|Exploration du Nord-Ouest du Spitsberg entreprise sous les ausp. de S.A.C. le Prince de Monaco par la mission Isachsen 2 Description du champ dóperation}}. Monaco: Impr. de Monaco.


==Notes==
==Notes==
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* ''Solo on Spitsbergen in 1906 and 1907'' (1908)
* ''Solo on Spitsbergen in 1906 and 1907'' (1908)
* ''Ishavsfolk and trips I: The Norwegian geographical selskabs Aarbok 1916-1919'' (1921) (new edition 1997)
* ''Ishavsfolk and trips I: The Norwegian geographical selskabs Aarbok 1916-1919'' (1921) (new edition 1997)
* ''Norwegian fangstmænds Færder to Greenland'' (1922) (offprint of geographic selskabs Yearbook 1919-21)
* ''Norwegian fangstmænds Færder to Greenland'' (1922) (offprint of geographic selskabs Yearbook 1919–21)
* ''Greenland and the Greenland Ice'' (1925)
* ''Greenland and the Greenland Ice'' (1925)
* ''Around behind blue whale'' (1927)
* ''Around behind blue whale'' (1927)
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{{commons category|Gunnar Isachsen}}
{{commons category|Gunnar Isachsen}}


{{Authority control}}
{{Persondata
| NAME =Isachsen, Gunnar
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =Norwegian military officer
| DATE OF BIRTH =3 October 1868
| PLACE OF BIRTH =[[Drøbak]], Norway
| DATE OF DEATH =19 December 1939
| PLACE OF DEATH =[[Asker]], Norway
}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Isachsen, Gunnar}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Isachsen, Gunnar}}
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[[Category:1939 deaths]]
[[Category:1939 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Frogn]]
[[Category:People from Frogn]]
[[Category:Norwegian Military Academy alumni]]
[[Category:Explorers of the Arctic]]
[[Category:Explorers of the Arctic]]
[[Category:Norwegian explorers]]
[[Category:Norwegian polar explorers]]
[[Category:Norwegian military personnel]]
[[Category:Norwegian Army personnel]]
[[Category:Commanders of the Order of St. Olav]]
[[Category:Recipients of the King's Medal of Merit in gold]]
[[Category:Recipients of the King's Medal of Merit in gold]]
[[Category:Explorers of Antarctica]]
[[Category:Explorers of Antarctica]]
[[Category:20th-century French military personnel]]

[[bg:Гунар Исаксен]]
[[de:Gunnerius Ingvald Isachsen]]
[[fr:Gunnar Isachsen]]
[[lv:Gunnars Īsaksens]]
[[no:Gunnar Isachsen]]
[[sv:Gunnar Isachsen]]

Latest revision as of 01:12, 26 July 2023

Gunnerius Ingvald Isachsen
Isachsen in 1921
Nickname(s)Gunnar Isachsen
Born(1868-10-03)3 October 1868
Drøbak, Norway
Died19 December 1939(1939-12-19) (aged 71)
Asker, Norway
AllegianceNorwegen
Service/branchCavalry
RankMajor
Other workPolar scientist;
First president of the Norwegian Maritime Museum

Gunnerius Ingvald Isachsen (3 October 1868 – 19 December 1939), was a Norwegian military officer and polar scientist. From 1923, he was the first president of the Norwegian Maritime Museum.

Early years

[edit]

He was born in Drøbak, Norway in 1868 and grew up there. His father was the shipmaster Nils Høgh Isachsen (1838–1913), and his mother was Marie Cecilie Sivertsen (1839–1909). His sister, Louise Isachsen, was a physician.[1]

After passing the matriculation exam in 1888, he entered the Norwegian Military Academy.

Career

[edit]
Isachsen after the Fram expedition

Isachsen was made a first lieutenant in the Norwegian cavalry in 1891. Gymnastics and sports keenly interested Isachsen, and he graduated from the gymnasium Central School in 1898, also taking courses at the Marine Observatory in Wilhelmshaven and the marine research in Bergen.

From 1898 to 1902, Isachsen was topographer on Otto Sverdrup's Fram expedition to the Arctic archipelago.[2] During this voyage, he was promoted to Rittmester in 1899, and mapped large areas of hitherto unknown islands in Northern Canada, mainly by long sledge journeys. These included Ellef Ringnes Island, King Christian Island.[3]

From 1903 to 1905, he participated in the French military service in Algeria and Paris. From 1906 to 1910, he led topographic and bathymetric research expeditions at Svalbard.[4] These expeditions were paid for by Prince Albert of Monaco.

Isachsen led his own government-financed expeditions to Spitsbergen in 1909 and 1910. As a result of these expeditions, he founded the Norwegian systematic research work on Svalbard. In 1911, Isachsen was on assignment in Russia and Japan. Three years later, a fire destroyed his house in Asker, and with it all his maps and records. He served as a regular salaried officer to 1917. He was the Norwegian government's technical delegate to the Svalbard Treaty of Paris in 1914 and the Paris Peace Conference in 1919.

Isachsen visited the Faroe Islands and Iceland in 1922. In 1923, he became the Director of the Norwegian Maritime Museum in Oslo,[1][5] and in 1923 and 1924, he took part in expeditions to East Greenland . He was promoted to Major in 1924, and participated in a special whaling mission to the Ross Sea in 1926–27. He was the government's whaling inspector in the Southern Ocean in 1929–30, and the leader of the fourth Norvegia expedition circumnavigating the South Pole in 1930–31.[6]

Personal life

[edit]
Welcome sign at Canada's Isachsen research station, 1974

Isachsen married Signe Amalie Eide (1876–1911) in 1903. Signehamna harbour in Svalbard is named in her honour.[5] They had three children (Fridtjov, Nils, and Gerd). His second marriage, in 1916, was to Marie Sophie Louisa Steenstrup (1884–1958).[1] They had five children (Kjell, Inger, Karen, Odd, and Finn); Odd Isachsen is still living.[7] Through his second marriage, Gunnar Isachsen was a brother-in-law of Hjalmar Steenstrup.[8]

In 1903, he was knighted 1st Class of the Order of St. Olav, and was commander of the Cross 2nd Class in 1931. He held the King's Medal of Merit in gold (1912), as well as a number of foreign orders and medals.

From 1911, he lived on his farm Vardeborg, under the Vardåsen, the highest point in Asker, Norway. Isachsen died of a heart attack in Asker in 1939.

Honors

[edit]

Partial works

[edit]
  • Isachsen, G. (1907). Astronomical and geodetical observations. Report of the second Norwegian Arctic expedition in the 'Fram', no. 5 = vol. 2. Kristiania: A.W. Brøgger.
  • Isachsen, G. (1913). Exploration du Nord-Ouest du Spitsberg entreprise sous les ausp. de S.A.C. le Prince de Monaco par la mission Isachsen 2 Description du champ dóperation. Monaco: Impr. de Monaco.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Barr, Susan. "Gunnar Isachsen". Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2009-11-12.
  2. ^ "Recent Norwegian Scientific Exploration in the Interior". Scientific American Monthly. 1 (Digitized Jun 3, 2009). Scientific American Pub. Co.: 234 March 1920.
  3. ^ a b Mills, William James (2003). Exploring polar frontiers: a historical encyclopedia. Vol. 2. ABC-CLIO. p. 209. ISBN 1-57607-422-6.
  4. ^ Harland, Walter Brian; Lester M. Anderson; Daoud Manasrah; Nicholas J. Butterfield (1997). Walter Brian Harland (ed.). The geology of Svalbard. Geological Society. p. 16. ISBN 1-897799-93-4.
  5. ^ a b Johansen, Bjørn Fossli; Jørn Henriksen; Øystein Overrein; Kristin Prestvold. "Signehamna [79° 16.4' N 11° 33' E]". Norwegian Polar Institute. Retrieved 2009-11-12.
  6. ^ Mills, p. 145
  7. ^ "100 years of systematic Norwegian research in Svalbard". ssf.npolar.no. Svalbard Science Forum. 9 June 2006. Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 2009-11-12.
  8. ^ Døving, Inger. "Hjalmar Steenstrup". In Helle, Knut (ed.). Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 15 December 2009.
  9. ^ "Isachsenfonna (Svalbard)". Norwegian Polar Institute. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  10. ^ "The Charles P. Daly" (PDF). amergeog.org. p. 6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-07-04. Retrieved 2009-11-15.

References

[edit]
  • Solo on Spitsbergen in 1906 and 1907 (1908)
  • Ishavsfolk and trips I: The Norwegian geographical selskabs Aarbok 1916-1919 (1921) (new edition 1997)
  • Norwegian fangstmænds Færder to Greenland (1922) (offprint of geographic selskabs Yearbook 1919–21)
  • Greenland and the Greenland Ice (1925)
  • Around behind blue whale (1927)
  • A ishavsskippers saga (1928)
  • Thoresen, Ole R. "Gunnar Isachsen in memoriam". Norwegian Maritime Museum 1914-1939 (1940)
[edit]