This is a timeline of events during Andersen's life.
|
1805
|
Hans
Christian Andersen is born in Odense.
Thomas
Jefferson begins his second term as president.
Treaty
of St. Petersburg allying Britain and Russian against
France.
Napoleon
crowned king of Italy in the Cathedral in Milan.
Battle
of Austerlitz: Napoleon's victory over the Austro-Russ.
Sir
Walter Scott writes "The Lay of the Last minstrel."
Friedrich
Schiller dies.
Beethoven
composes the opera "Fidelio."
Goya
Paints portrait of Doña Isabel Cobos de
Procal.
Mathematician
William R. Hamilton, Jr is born.
F.W.
A. Sartürner isolates morphine.
|
|
1806
|
Official
end of the Holy Roman Empire.
Napoleon
decrees the beginning of his "Continental
System."
Prussia
declares war on France.
Napoleon
enters Berlin.
The
French army enters Warsaw.
Beethoven
composes symphony No. 4.
Rossini
composes his first opera "Demetrio a Polibio."
Thorvaldsen sculpts "Hebe."
Napoleon
establishes a consistorial organization for Jews
in France.
|
| 1807
|
Treaty
of Tilsit between Napoleon, Alexander I of Russia,
and Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia.
US
passes the Embargo Act against Britain and France.
England
prohibits slave trade.
France
invades Portugal.
Lord
Byron writes "Hours of Idleness."
Wordsworth
write "Ode on Intimations of Immortality."
Hegel
writes "Phänomenologie des Geistes," [Phenomenology
of the Spirit].
David
completes the painting "Coronation of Napoleon."
U.S.
Evangelical Association, founded by Jacob Albright,
holds its first convention Commercial Law Code.
Robert
Fulton's steamer "Clermont" paddles on
the Hudson River.
|
| 1808
|
U.S.
prohibits importation of slaves from Africa.
French
army occupies Rome, invades Spain, and takes Madrid
and Barcelona.
Goethe
writes "Faust," part I.
Oehlenschläger write "Hakon
Jarl."
Sir
Walter Scott writes Marmion, a narrative
in verse.
Beethoven
composes his Symphonies No. 5 and No. 6.
Goya
paints "Execution of the Citizens of Madrid."
Napoleon
abolishes the inquisition in Spain and Italy.
Source
of the Ganges River is discovered.
The
fashion of pigtails in men's hair disappears.
Napoleon
meets Goethe.
|
| 1809
|
Austria
becomes part of Napoleon's Continental System.
Peace
treaty at Schönbronn
James
Madison becomes the fourth president of the U.S.
Napoleon
annexes Papal States and take Pope Pius VII prisoner.
King
Gustavus IV is deposed in Sweden; succeeded by
Charles XIII
Marshal
Jean Bernadotte is elected Crown Prince of Sweden.
French
army takes Vienna.
Goethe
writes Die Wahlverwandtschaften [The Elective
Affinities].
Washington
Irving writes Rip van Winkle.
Schlegel
writes Lectures on Dramatic Art and Literature.
Edgar
Allen Poe is born.
Lord
Alfred Tenyson is born.
Thomas
Paine dies.
Charles
Darwin is born.
|
| 1810
|
Napoleon
hits his zenith with the annexation of Holland,
Hanover, Bremen, Hamburg, Lauenburg, and Lübeck.
Charles
de Mantambert is born.
Alfred
de Musset is born.
Sir
Walter Scott writes Lady of the Lake.
Beethoven
composes music to Goethe's "Egmont."
Rossini
composes the opera "La Cambiale di Matrimonio."
Frédréic
Chopin is born in Poland.
Robert
Schuman is born.
First
public billiards rooms are open in London.
U.S.
population: 7,239,881
|
| 1811
|
Paraguay
becomes independent of Spain.
Later
U.S. president William Harrison defeats Indians
under Tecumseh at Tippecanoe, Indiana.
Russians
seize Belgrade.
Jane
Austin writes Sense and Sensibility.
University
of Christiania, Oslo, is founded.
National
University of Nicaragua is founded.
The
Prague Conservatoire is opened.
Hungarian
composer Franz Liszt is born.
Thorvaldsen sculpts "Procession
of Alexander the Great."
|
| 1812 |
Andersen
visits the theater at Odense for
the first time. |
| 1813 |
|
| 1814 |
|
| 1815 |
|
| 1816 |
Andersen's
father dies of an illness he contracted when he enlisted
as a soldier during the Napoleonic Wars. |
| 1817 |
|
| 1818 |
Andersen's
Mother remarries. |
| 1819 |
Hans
Christian Andersen goes from his home town of Odense to Copenhagen in
order to try his luck at the Royal Theater. He finds
influential Patrons after only a few weeks. |
| 1820 |
|
| 1821 |
|
| 1822 |
Andersen
turns in a couple of badly written plays. They are
rejected, however, they are seen as having promise.
Jonas Collin becomes Andersen's guardian and sends
his to Slagelse to school. |
| 1823 |
|
| 1824 |
|
| 1825 |
|
| 1826 |
Andersen's
headmaster, Simon Meisling, moves to Elsinore and
Andersen follows. Andersen writes "The Dying
Child." |
| 1827 |
Andersen
is miserable with Meisling. Collin finally takes
the complaints seriously and gives Andersen a private
tutor. Andersen publishes poems in the leading literary
journal Kjøbenhavns flyvende Post. "The
Dying Child" appears in Danish and German. |
| 1828 |
Andersen
passes his examinations and matriculates at Copenhagen
University. |
| 1829 |
Andersen
publishes his first prose work, Fodreise [Journey
on Foot], modeled after ETA
Hoffmann's works. Andersen also writes a successful
play, Kjærlighed paa Nicolai Taarn [Love
in Nicholas' Tower]. |
| 1830 |
|
| 1831 |
Andersen
writes his first important collection of poems. He
travels to Germany where he meets Ludwig
Tieck in Dresden and Adalbert
von Chamisso in Berlin. Upon his return, Andersen
writes a travel log called Skyggebilleder [Silhouettes]. |
| 1832 |
Andersen
writes librettos for a musical and an opera. He writes
his first autobiography, which remains unpublished
until 1926. |
| 1833 |
Andersen
starts his travels which will take him into the following
year. He journeys through Germany and France to Italy.
Andersen meets and befriends the Danish sculptor
Bertel Thorvaldsen at the artist colony in Rome. |
| 1834 |
|
| 1835 |
Andersen
publishes his first novel, Improvisatoren [The
Improvisatore] and his first collection of
tales under the title Eventyr, fortalte for Børn [Fairy
Tale, told for Children] |
| 1836 |
Andersen
continues to write plays and two novels O.T.
and Kun en Spillemand [Only a Fiddler].
They enjoy a certain amount of success being translated
into German, Swedish, Dutch, English, and later several
other languages. |
| 1837 |
Andersen
makes his first trip to Sweden, where he meets the
author Fredrika Bremer. The French homme de lettres
Xavier Marmier writes a biographical article on Andersen
including a translation of "The Dying Child." The
article, "Vie d'un poéte" [The Life
of a Poet], appears in Revue de Paris and has a decisive
influence on Andersen's becoming a known literary
figure in Europe. |
| 1838 |
Søren
Kierkegaard writes an attack on Andersen's
writing style in his first book Af en endnu
Levendes Papirer [From the Papers of One
Still Living], a review of Kun en Spillemand [Only
a Fiddler]. Andersen is given the royal literary
scholarship. |
| 1839 |
|
| 1840 |
Andersen's
play Mullatten [The Mulatto] is performed at The
Royal Theater in Copenhagen,
and later that year in Stockholm and Odense.
Andersen departs for another tour of Europe and includes
the Orient. On this trip, he meets Franz Liszt and
Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. |
| 1841 |
|
| 1842 |
Andersen
writes another travel log based on his journey called En
Digters Bazar [A Poet's Bazaar]. |
| 1843 |
Andersen
writes a new series of tales called simply Eventyr [Tales].
He also meets the Swedish singer Jenny
Lind. |
| 1844 |
Andersen
nurtures a close friendship with Grand Duke Carl
Alexander von Sachsen-Weimar, who wants Andersen
installed as the new Goethe in Weimar. |
| 1845 |
Andersen's
novels are translated into English |
| 1846 |
|
| 1847 |
Andersen
writes his first official autobiography, Mit Livs
Eventyr [The Story of My Life]. His collected
works are published in German. |
| 1848 |
Andersen's
tales are published in French |
| 1849 |
Andersen
puts on his first play for the popular theater Casino. |
| 1850 |
|
| 1851 |
Andersen
writes a travel account called I Sverrig [In Sweden]
containing his poetical credo which is a blend of
poetry, religion and science. Andersen is given the
title professor. |
| 1852 |
|
| 1853 |
The
Danish edition of Samlade Skrifter [Collected Works]
begins to appear, including a revised version of Mit
Livs Eventyr [The Fairy Tale of My Life]. |
| 1854 |
|
| 1855 |
|
| 1856 |
|
| 1857 |
Andersen
makes a second trip to England where he overstays
his welcome with Charles
Dickens, ending their friendship. |
| 1858 |
Andersen
reads aloud his tales for the first time at the newly-established
Workers' Association (established by middle-class
workers). He reads there about 20 times in subsequent
years, often reading to audiences of 500-900. |
| 1859 |
|
| 1860 |
|
| 1861 |
|
| 1862 |
Andersen
begins a travel to Spain that will conclude in the
following year. |
| 1863 |
Andersen
writes another travel account called I Spanien [In
Spain]. |
| 1864 |
|
| 1865 |
|
| 1866 |
Andersen
travels to Portugal, writing about the trip in Et
Besøg i Portugal [A Visit to Portugal]
published in 1868. |
| 1867 |
Andersen
is given the title Councilor of State and later Honorary
Citizen of Odense. Odense is
illuminated in his honor. |
| 1868 |
Andersen
publishes the story "The
Dryad" about the world exposition in Paris
in 1867. He meets the young critic Georg
Brandes, who writes a seminal article about Andersen
the following year in Illustreret Tidende. |
| 1869 |
|
| 1870 |
Andersen
writes his sixth and last novel, Lykke-Peer [Lucky
Peer]. |
| 1871 |
Andersen
takes a trip to Norway. |
| 1872 |
Andersen
publishes his final collection of tales. |
| 1873 |
|
| 1874 |
Andersen
is made konferensråd a high, now obsolete,
Danish title. |
| 1875 |
Hans
Christian Andersen dies on the 4th of August, probably
of cancer, at the home of the Jewish merchant family
Melchior, who have been taking care of him for some
time. |