
Petter Dass memorial in Sandnessjøen
'Petter Dass' (born in
1647, died
September 18,
1707) was the foremost Norwegian
poet and
hymn writer of his generation.
He was born at Northern
Herøy,
Nordland,
Norway. His father was
Peter Dundas from
Dundee,
Scotland. His mother was
Maren Falch. His father died in 1653, when Petter was 6, and the children were cared for by relatives and friends. His mother remarried, but Petter remained with his mother's sister, Anna Falck, who was married to the priest at
Nærøy.
At 13, Petter began attending school in
Bergen, and later studied theology in
Copenhagen. He was lonely and impoverished during his years in Copenhagen, but intellectually stimulated.
After his years in Copenhagen, he returned to Norway and became a tutor in Vefsn. He fathered a child out of wedlock, and had to travel to Copenhagen and seek pardon from the Danish king. In 1689 he was appointed parish priest at
Alstahaug.
He is known as a
parish priest in Alstahaug, and writer of texts and
hymns. His most famous work is the versified topographical description of northern Norway, ''Nordlands Trompet (The Trumpet of Nordland''), and some psalms still in use, most prominently ''Herre Gud, ditt dyre navn og ære (Good Lord, thy precious name and glory)''.
Petter Dass was after his death, and is to some extent still, subject of much
folklore of Nordland. The legend of how he fooled the devil to carry him to Copenhagen to preach for the king is one of many tales.
External links
★
link to all his works, at UiO.no