Danish: Difference between revisions

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*[http://historicalleys.blogspot.com.au/2012/01/danish-factory-in-calicut-1752-1796.html The Danish Factory in Calicut 1752-1796] by Maddy. historicalleys.blogspot
*[http://historicalleys.blogspot.com.au/2012/01/danish-factory-in-calicut-1752-1796.html The Danish Factory in Calicut 1752-1796] by Maddy. historicalleys.blogspot
*There is a [https://web.archive.org/web/20120108071646/http://www.zum.de:80/whkmla/region/india/tldanindia.html Timeline of Danish India] on the  WHKMLA website in the section relating to [https://web.archive.org/web/20140824050532/http://www.zum.de/whkmla/region/india/xdanindia.html Danish India], now archived webpages.
*There is a [https://web.archive.org/web/20120108071646/http://www.zum.de:80/whkmla/region/india/tldanindia.html Timeline of Danish India] on the  WHKMLA website in the section relating to [https://web.archive.org/web/20140824050532/http://www.zum.de/whkmla/region/india/xdanindia.html Danish India], now archived webpages.
*[https://www.livehistoryindia.com/lhi-book-club/2021/02/08/robert-ivermee Robert Ivermee on ''Hooghly: The Global History of a River''] Live History India Book Club. Contains a YouTube video (50 minutes). Includes discussion about the Danish in Bengal.
*[https://www.peepultree.world/livehistoryindia/films/places/hooghly-the-global-history-of-a-river-with-robert-ivermee Robert Ivermee on ''Hooghly: The Global History of a River''] Live History India Book Club at peepultree.world. Contains a video (50 minutes). Includes discussion about the Danish in Bengal.
*Danes in India did not intermarry much with local Indians, according to [http://home.alphalink.com.au/~agilbert/carton.html "Beyond "Cotton Mary": Anglo-Indian Categories and Reclaiming the Diverse Past"] by Adrian Carton ''The International Journal of Anglo-Indian Studies'' Volume 5, Number 1, 2000.  
*Danes in India did not intermarry much with local Indians, according to [http://home.alphalink.com.au/~agilbert/carton.html "Beyond "Cotton Mary": Anglo-Indian Categories and Reclaiming the Diverse Past"] by Adrian Carton ''The International Journal of Anglo-Indian Studies'' Volume 5, Number 1, 2000.  
*[https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Denmark Denmark] includes [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Danish_Word_List Danish Word List] and [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Danish_Handwriting_Guide Danish Handwriting Guide]  Family Search (LDS)  Wiki
*[https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Denmark Denmark] includes [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Danish_Word_List Danish Word List] and [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Danish_Handwriting_Guide Danish Handwriting Guide]  Family Search (LDS)  Wiki

Revision as of 02:28, 20 May 2024

Non-British Ancestors:
Armenian
Danish
Dutch
French
German
Greek
Indian
Jewish
Portuguese

Information pertaining to ancestors with a Danish connection.

History

The Danish East India Company was established in 1616 and a Danish settlement was established at Tranquebar in 1620. There was also a Danish settlement at Serampore near Calcutta. These settlements were more important for the missionary activities carried on there than for commerce. They were perhaps the first perceptable cultural impingement of the Protestant West on India.[1]

In June, 1801 the Danish were defeated at Tranquebar by the Scots Brigade and in 1845 the whole Danish colony was sold to England. This ended the Danish presence in India.

Peter Rasmussen of the University of Copenhagen wrote a term paper in 1996 about the Danish East India Company 1616-1669, refer External links below. This is very interesting and has a number of references at the bottom for those who want to pursue the subject further.

The article "The Danes at Serampore", by F.B.Bradley Birt, Calcutta Review, No. 295, January 1919, (New [2nd] Series Volume 25), pages 92-118, is available online, see below.

Akso see

Church records

For church and others records relating to Tranquebar, see the Fibiwiki page Tranquebar

Other sources

Thomas M. Robertson has kindly extracted from the Calcutta Annual Directory and Calendar of 1813 all the names of Danish residents of Serampore.

BACSA has published the following books which shed some light on the Danish presence in Asia :

  • Memoirs of an Adventurous Dane in India : 1904-1947 by August Peter Hansen, 1999
  • Protestant Cemetery in Bangkok by Justin Corfield, 1997. There are a lot Danish folk buried in this cemetery, as there was a substantial group of Danes who came to Thailand to train the Police and Customs Services. See Thailand.

The 1834 census of Tranquebar is available on FamilySearch digitised microfilm. It is on two rolls on microfilm #39091 and #39092, catalogue entry, which are available on your home computer, but you must be signed into FamilySearch.

The Register af Blanketregnskaber 1800-1847 is available as digitised FamilySearch microfilm, available for viewing on your home computer. The microfilm description is "Register of applications pertaining to civil records including special burials, marriages without banns, divorce petitions, nonprobate will actions that should normally have been handled through a higher authority. Includes the various estates and baronies on mainland Denmark, and then the Danish possessions, Iceland, Faroe Islands, West Indies and Tranquebar, India." . The records for Trankebar appear at the end of the list, microfilm 382501, DGS 7751337, catalogue entry.

There are Danish records of Tranquebar and Serampore in the King's Library (Det Kongelige Bibliotek) or Royal Library, and Danish State Archives in Copenhagen, Denmark, refer the WHKMLA link below.

External links

Historical books online

References

  1. A History of India (Volume Two) (1978) by Percival Spear p.68