Henrik Ibsen was the son of a weathy merchant in Norway. In 1836, however,
the elder Ibsen filed for bankruptcy. The family was forced to move to a small
house, and Henrik had to leave his beloved private school to attend a public
school, which he always believed left him with an inferior education. He left
home as soon as he was old enough to become a druggist's apprentice. As a young
man, Ibsen was both a social and political rebel, founding a radical club that
worked to promote issues of personal and national freedom. He drank and gambled
heavily, and at the age of 18 he became an unwed father. In 1850 he wrote his
first play, and in 1857 he became the director of the Norwegian Theater, and
he and his family moved abroad. They lived primarily in Italy until 1891, and
Ibsen wrote his major plays during this time.
Major works by Ibsen Peer Gynt (1867)
Ghosts (1881) An Enemy of the People (1882)
Hedda Gabler (1890)
Ibsen and the Web This page, by an
assistant professor of English at Seton Hall University, offers comprehensive
background information on Ibsen, including details about the literary periods
in which he wrote his plays.
Would you like to see the title page of the manuscript of A Doll's House
in Ibsen's handwriting? Visit this page.
To learn more about three museums in Norway dedicated to perpetuating the memory
and legacy of Henrik Ibsen, click on this link. |