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Ingstad Family Media
Ingstad may refer to: * 8993 Ingstad, a main-belt asteroid, named after Helge Ingstad * Ingstad Family Media, a broadcasting company in North Dakota, United States People * Helge Ingstad (1899–2001), a Norwegian explorer. * Marcus Pløen Ingstad (1837–1918), a Norwegian professor of law and legal scholar * Anne Stine Ingstad (1918–1997), a Norwegian archaeologist and wife of Helge Ingstad * Vilde Ingstad Vilde Ingstad (born 18 December 1994) is a Norwegian handball player for Team Esbjerg and the Norwegian national team. She made her debut on the Norwegian national team in 2014. She also represented Norway in the 2013 Women's Junior European H ...
(born 1994), a Norwegian handball player {{disambiguation ...
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Ingstad Family Media
Ingstad may refer to: * 8993 Ingstad, a main-belt asteroid, named after Helge Ingstad * Ingstad Family Media, a broadcasting company in North Dakota, United States People * Helge Ingstad (1899–2001), a Norwegian explorer. * Marcus Pløen Ingstad (1837–1918), a Norwegian professor of law and legal scholar * Anne Stine Ingstad (1918–1997), a Norwegian archaeologist and wife of Helge Ingstad * Vilde Ingstad Vilde Ingstad (born 18 December 1994) is a Norwegian handball player for Team Esbjerg and the Norwegian national team. She made her debut on the Norwegian national team in 2014. She also represented Norway in the 2013 Women's Junior European H ...
(born 1994), a Norwegian handball player {{disambiguation ...
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Helge Ingstad
Helge Marcus Ingstad (30 December 1899 – 29 March 2001) was a Norwegian explorer. In 1960, after mapping some Norse settlements, Ingstad and his wife archaeologist Anne Stine Ingstad found remnants of a Viking settlement in L'Anse aux Meadows in the province of Newfoundland in Canada. They were thus the first to prove conclusively that the Icelandic/Greenlandic Norsemen such as Leif Erickson had found a way across the Atlantic Ocean to North America, roughly 500 years before Christopher Columbus and John Cabot. He also thought that the mysterious disappearance of the Greenland Norse Settlements in the 14th and 15th centuries could be explained by their emigration to North America. Helge Ingstad died at Diakonhjemmet Hospital in Oslo at the age of 101. Early life Helge Ingstad was the son of Olav Ingstad (1867–1958) and Olga Marie Qvam (1869–1946) in Meråker, Nord-Trøndelag. His father was municipal engineer in Tromsø and held the title of factory supervisor. He wa ...
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Marcus Pløen Ingstad
Marcus Pløen Ingstad (18 August 1837 – 24 September 1918) was a Norwegian jurist and educator. He was a legal historian and scholar who was the author of several books on Roman law. He served as a Professor of Jurisprudence and Dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of Oslo between 1870 and 1918. Biography Ingstad was born in Christiania (now Oslo), Norway. He was the son of Fredrik Emil Ingstad (1808–77) and Louise Platou (1812–43). He attended the Royal Frederick University (now University of Oslo): cand.philos. (1856), cand.jur. (1861) and Uppsala University: Dr. jur. (1877). Ingstad was a Professor of Jurisprudence at the Faculty of Law of the Royal Frederick University (1870–1918) and also served as Dean of the Faculty of Law. He was ordained an assessor in the Supreme Court of Norway (1880 and 1891). He was also a legal scholar and historian as well as the author of several books on Roman law Roman law is the law, legal system of ancient Rome, i ...
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Anne Stine Ingstad
Anne Stine Ingstad (11 February 1918 – 6 November 1997) was a Norwegian archaeologist who, along with her husband explorer Helge Ingstad, discovered the remains of a Norse settlement at L'Anse aux Meadows in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador in 1960. Biography Anne Stine Moe was born and raised in Lillehammer, in Oppland county, Norway. Her parents were attorney Eilif Moe (1889–1954) and Louise Augusta Bauck Lindeman (1886–1966). Ingstad was the sister of Norwegian art historian and pianist, Ole Henrik Moe (1920– 2013). She married Helge Ingstad in 1941, after which she became his scientific collaborator. She studied archaeology at the University of Oslo in the 1950s. She took a master's degree in Nordic archeology in 1960. From 1960 to 1961, she was curator at the Norwegian Forestry Museum at Elverum. Between 1961 and 1968, Helge Ingstad and Anne Stine Ingstad conducted research resulting in the discoverery of settlement traces at L'Anse aux Mead ...
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