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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Marie_GrubbeMarie Grubbe - Wikipedia

    Biography. Daughter of the statesman and nobleman Erik Grubbe (1605–92) and his wife Maren Juul (1608–47). She was married to Ulrik Frederik Gyldenløve, Count of Laurvig (1638–1704), Governor-general of Norway, the son of King Frederick III of Denmark, in 1660–70, the noble Palle Dyre (d. 1707) in 1673–91, and to the ...

  2. COMPARTE. [Marie Grubbe]. Pro­tagonista de la novela de su mismo nom­bre (v.), del escritor danés J. P. Jacobsen (1847-1885). De la María Grubbe histórica, mujer de noble origen muerta míseramente, nos habla L. Holberg (1684-1754), con la cu­riosidad de un contemporáneo que ha tra­tado en vano de comprender las vicisi­tudes de la ...

  3. Novela del escritor y poeta danés Jens Peter Jacobsen (1847-1885), iniciada en 1873 e im­presa tres años más tarde. María Grubbe, «interieur» del siglo XVII, es una obra de viva poesía. En el personaje central, una María Grubbe muy distinta de la María Grubbe histórica (hija de un noble del campo, casada con Ulrik Frederik ...

  4. Marie Grubbe (ca. 1643-1718) var datter af Erik Grubbe til herregården Tjele øst for Viborg. Hun var en dansk adelsdame, hvis usædvanlige skæbne har fængslet både historikere, forfattere og læsere siden 1700-tallet.

  5. Marie Grubbe – En ekstraordinær kvinde. Marie Grubbe har gennem tiden inspireret forfattere og dramatikere som en for sin tid selvstændig og grænseoverskridende kvinde. Ifølge historiker Dan H. Andersen er nøglen til at forstå hende, at hun ikke kunne få børn. Af Josepha Lembcke.

  6. Marie Grubbe is about a noble-women who lived in 17th Century Denmark. Her scandalous personal life appears has inspired an opera, several novels and recently a Danish television serious. Her erotic pilgrimage indeed took many turns.

  7. The Danish novel Fru Marie Grubbe was published in 1876 and a Swedish translation in 1877 (and again in 1888, as digitized). This English translation appeared in 1917 in New York and London. It was digitized in November 2007 at the University of Toronto for the Internet Archive, from where the scanned images in August 2020 were copied to Project Runeberg and a new OCR text was added.