Books
see page history

Overview edit see section history

Hans Christian Andersen was born in Odense, Denmark, on Tuesday, April 2, 1805. Most English (as well as German and French) sources use the name "Hans Christian Andersen", but in Denmark and the rest of Scandinavia he is usually referred to as merely "H. C. Andersen." His name "Hans Christian" is a traditional Danish name and is used as a single name, though originally a combination of two individual names. It is incorrect to use only one of the two parts without the other. It is an accepted custom in Denmark to use only the initials in this and a few other names.Andersen's father apparently believed that he might be related to nobility, and according to scholars at the Hans Christian Andersen Center, his paternal grandmother told him that the family had once been in a higher social class. However, investigation proves these stories were unfounded. The family apparently did have some connections to Danish royalty, but these were only work-related. Nevertheless, the theory that Andersen was the illegitimate son of royalty continues to persists in Denmark, bolstered by the fact that the Danish king at the time took a personal interest in Andersen as a youth and paid for his education.<citation needed> The writer Rolf Dorset insists that not all options have been explored in determining Andersen's ancestry.

Andersen displayed great intelligence and imagination as a young boy, traits that were fostered by the indulgence of his parents and by the superstition of his mother. He made himself a small toy-theatre and sat at home making clothes for his puppets, and reading all the plays that he could lay his hands upon; among them were those of Ludvig Holberg and William Shakespeare. Throughout his childhood, he had a passionate love for literature. He was known to memorize entire plays by Shakespeare and to recite them using his wooden dolls as actors.

In 1816, his father died in a fire and, in order to support himself, Andersen worked as an apprentice for both a weaver and a tailor. He later worked in a cigarette factory where his fellow workers humiliated him by betting on whether he was in fact a girl, pulling down his trousers to check. At the age of fourteen, Andersen moved to Copenhagen seeking employment as an actor in the theatre. He had a pleasant soprano voice and succeeded in being admitted to the Royal Danish Theatre. This career stopped short when his voice broke. A colleague at the theatre had referred to him as a poet, and Andersen took this very seriously and began to focus on writing.Following an accidental meeting, Jonas Collin started taking an interest in the odd boy and sent Andersen to the grammar school in Slagelse, paying all his expenses. Before even being admitted to grammar-school, Andersen had already succeeded in publishing his first story, The Ghost at Palnatoke's Grave in 1822. Though an unwilling pupil, Andersen studied both in Slagelse and at a school in Elsinore until 1827. He later stated that these years had been the darkest and most bitter parts of his life. He had experienced living in his schoolmaster's own home, being abused in order to "build his character", and he had been alienated from his fellow students, being much older than most of them, homely and unattractive. Furthermore, he was dyslexic, a very likely reason for his learning difficulties and he later said that the school faculty forbade or discouraged him to write.<citation needed> He would later learn to speak near fluent English, Dutch, and German, as well as the Scandinavian languages.

In June 1847, Andersen paid his first visit to England and enjoyed a triumphal social success during the summer. The Countess of Blessington invited him to her parties where intellectual and famous people could meet, and it was at one party that he met Charles Dickens for the first time. They shook hands and walked to the veranda which was of much joy to Andersen. He wrote in his diary "We had come to the veranda, I was so happy to see and speak to England's now living writer, whom I love the most.
Ten years later, Andersen visited England, primarily to visit Dickens. He stayed at Dickens' home for five weeks, oblivious to Dickens' increasingly blatant hints for him to leave. Dickens' daughter said of Andersen, "He was a bony bore, and stayed on and on.
Shortly after Andersen left, Dickens published David Copperfield, featuring the obsequious Uriah Heep, who is said to have been modeled on Andersen. Andersen quite enjoyed the visit, and never understood why Dickens stopped answering his letters.


Bibliography

  1. (2011)

    The Ugly Duckling

  2. (2009)

    Miklavž in Miklavžek in druge pravljice

  3. (2007)

    The Complete Fairy Tales and Stories

  4. (2006)

    Treasury of Hans Christian Andersen

  5. (2005)

    Fairy Tales

See complete bibliography (283)

Personal edit see section history

  • Legal name: Hans Christian Andersen
  • Birthdate: April 2, 1805
  • Birthplace: Odense, Denmark
  • Nationality: Danish
  • Gender: Male
  • Official Website: http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/andersen.htm
  • Genres: Children's literature, Travelogue
  • Date of death: August 4, 1875 (aged 70)
  • Burial location: (add)

Unbound edit see section history

This content section has been deprecated.
Please help us clean up the page by moving the content from this section into other relevant sections. Once it has been emptied this section will no longer appear on the page but the edit history will still be available in the page's history.





Hans Christian Andersen's List of Short Stories


The Little Sea Maid (1837)

The Shadow (1930)
The Angel
Anne Lisbeth
Athens
The Beetle
The Bell
The Bell-Deep
The Bird of Popular Song
Bishop of Borglum and His Warriors
The Bond of Friendship
The Bosphorus
The Bottle-Neck
The Bronze Pig

The Butterfly
By the Almshouse Window
The Carnival in Rome
Charming
The Child in the Grave
Children's Prattle
The Constant Tin-Soldier
The Cripple
The Daisy
The Darning-Needle
Days in the Mediterranean
The Drop of Water
The Dryad
The Dumb Book
The Elder-Tree Mother
The Elf-Hill
Everything in its Right Place
The False Collar
The Farm-Yard Cock and the Weather-Cock
The Fellow Travellers
The Fir Tree
Five out of One Shell
The Flax
The Flying Trunk
The Garden of Paradise
The Girl Who Trod on the Loaf
The Goblin and the Huckster
The Golden Treasure
The Goloshes of Fortune
Good Humour
Grandmother
The Graveyard at Scutari
Great Claus and Little Claus
A Great Grief
Grief of Heart
The Happy Family

Holger Danske
Ib and Christine
The Ice Maiden
In a Thousand Years
In Sweden
In the Duck-Yard
In the Nursery
In the Uttermost Parts of the Sea
'It's Quite True'
Jack the Dullard
The Jewish Girl
The Jumper
The Last Dream of the Old Oak Tree
The Last Pearl
A Leaf from the Sky
The Leaping Match
The Legend of Nurnberg Castle

Little Tuk
The Loveliest Rose in the World
The Lovers
Mahomet's Birthday
The Marsh King's Daughter
The Metal Pig
The Money-Pig
Mother Elder
The Naughty Boy
The Neighbouring Families
The Neighbours
A Night in the Apennines

The Old Bachelor's Nightcap
The Old Church Bell
The Old Gravestone
The Old House
Old Luk-Oie
The Old Street Lamp
Ole the Tower-Keeper
Our Aunt
The Pen and Inkstand
The Phoenix Bird
A Picture from the Castle Ramparts
A Picture from the Fortress Wall
The Pigs
The Porter's Son
Poultry Meg's Family

The Psyche
The Puppet Showman
Put Off is Not Done with
'
The Racers
The Real Princess

A Rose from the Grave of Homer
The Rose-Elf
She was Good for Nothing
The Shepherdess and the Chimney-Sweeper
The Shirt Collar
The Shoes of Fortune
The Silver Shilling
The Snail and the Rose Tree
The Snow Man
The Snow Queen
The Snowdrop
Something
Soup on a Sausage-Peg
The Stone of the Wise Men
The Storks
The Storm Shakes the Shield
A Story from the Sand-Dunes
The Story of a Mother

The Story of the Year
The Swan's Nest

'There is a Difference'
The Thistle's Experiences
The Thorny Road of Honour
A Thousand Years Hence


The Toad

The Travelling Companion
Twelve by the Mail
Two Brothers
Two Maidens

Under the Willow Tree
What One Can Invent
What the Moon Saw
What the Old Man Does is Always Right

The Wild Swans
'The Will-o'-the-Wisp is in the Town', Says the Moor-Woman
The Wind Tells About Waldemar Daa and His Daughters
The Windmill
The World's Fairest Rose