Sophie Beate Huitfeldt
10 Jan 1724 – 14 Jun 1785
Daughter of Henrik Jorgen Huitfeldt and Birgitte Christine Kaas
Wife of Hans de Tonsberg
Mother of Helene Christine Elizabeth de Tonsberg
Norwegian Ancestors & Artists
Sophie Beate Huitfeldt
10 Jan 1724 – 14 Jun 1785
Daughter of Henrik Jorgen Huitfeldt and Birgitte Christine Kaas
Wife of Hans de Tonsberg
Mother of Helene Christine Elizabeth de Tonsberg
Hans de Tonsberg
1720 – 24 Jun 1770
Son of Wilhelm de Tonsberg and Helene Sophie Kaas
Husband of Sophie Beate Huitfeldt
Father of Helene Christine Elizabeth de Tonsberg
Jacob Jacobsen Pavels
17 Apr 1740 – 25 Jan 1804
Son of Jacob Claussøn PAVELS and Brynhild Pedersdatter HIELM
Husband of Helene Christine Elisabeth DE TONSBERG
Father of Hans Jacob Pavels
Seline Samueline Bryn
09 Jun 1792 – 23 Feb 1880
Daughter of Jacob Bryn and Marie Samuelsdatter
Wife of Hans Jacob Pavels
Mother of Amalie Tonsberg Pavels
Hans Jacob Pavels
24 Apr 1789 – 22 May 1868
Son of Jacob Jacobsen Pavels
and Helene Christine Elisabeth DE TONSBERG
Husband of Seline Samueline Bryn
Father of Amalie Pavels Tonsberg
Andreas Johannesen Bølstad
1765 – 26 Jul 1814
Son of Peder Olsen BØLSTAD and Aase ANDERSDTR
Father of Berte Marie Andreasdatter Sundby
Heritable family names (surnames) were generally adopted rather late within Scandinavia. Nobility were the first to take names that would be passed on from one generation to the next. Later, clergy, artisans and merchants in cities took heritable names. Family names were still used together with primary patronyms (father’s name plus an affix denoting relationship), which were used by all social classes. This meant that most families until modern times did not have family names. Scandinavian patronyms were generally derived from the father’s given name with the addition of a suffix meaning ‘son’ or ‘daughter’. Sometimes the family name of the mother would be given to the children if that name carried status or an inheritance came from the mother’s side. The names of family farms or other place names were also used. A nobleman had the right to write himself to (Norwegian: til) the seat farm(s) or the estate(s) on which he resided, for example ‘Hans Kaas til Rostrup’.