Ingerid Amundsdatter
(Cir 1709-1792)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. Peder Torvaldsen

2. Anders Guttulsen Galtebu

Ingerid Amundsdatter 2 3

  • Born: Cir 1709
  • Marriage (1): Peder Torvaldsen
  • Marriage (2): Anders Guttulsen Galtebu on 4 Apr 1753 in Askim, Østfold, Norway 1
  • Died: 1792, Askim, Østfold, Norway aged 83
  • Buried: 6 May 1792, Askim, Østfold, Norway

   Other names for Ingerid were Ingrid and Ingri Amundsdatter Nordre Løken.

  General Notes:

Ingrid was from Østersund in Fet.

After Peder died in 1748 Ingrid stayed with the Nordre Løken farm (nordre del) in Askim until 1754, when she remarried with Quartermaster Anders Guttulsen Galtebu. Anders died in 1771 and Ingerid bought the vestre Løken farm from her brother-in-law and son-in-law Frans Guttulsen. In 1785 she sold vestre Løken to her son Amund Pedersen for 300 rdl.


Ingerid married Peder Torvaldsen. (Peder Torvaldsen was born circa 1693 and died in 1748.)


  Marriage Notes:

They were recorded as Peder Tarvaldsen og Ingri Amundsdatter Nordre Løken when their daughter Karen was christened in 1736. 1

Ingerid next married Anders Guttulsen Galtebu, son of Guttul Bjørnsen Galtebu and Kirsti Fransdatter, on 4 Apr 1753 in Askim, Østfold, Norway.1 (Anders Guttulsen Galtebu was born circa 1708 in Galtebu, Askim, Østfold, Norway and died in 1771.)


Sources


1 The Digitalarkivet Census for Norway, http://digitalarkivet.no/cgi-win/WebFront.exe?slag=vis&tekst=meldingar&spraak=e (A joint project between The National Archives of Norway, The regional Archive of Bergen and The Department of History, University of Bergen.), Askim: 1733-1757, Ministerialbok.

2 Ulf Grøndahl, Gårdshistorie for Askim (Bind 2) (Utgitt av Askim kommune, Askim, 1987.), pp. 215-16, 238, 378.

3 The Digitalarkivet Census for Norway, http://digitalarkivet.no/cgi-win/WebFront.exe?slag=vis&tekst=meldingar&spraak=e (A joint project between The National Archives of Norway, The regional Archive of Bergen and The Department of History, University of Bergen.), Askim: 1790-1816, Ministerialbok.

Updated 14 June 2008. Contact: Ken Nygaard    My Home Page