Rasmus Effersøe


Rasmus Christoffer Effersøe was a Faroese agronomist, poet, and politician.
Effersøe was born in Trongisvágur. His surname comes from the Icelandic island of Effersey. He was the son of the local administrator Gudmund Christie Laurentius Isholm Effersøe and the brother of the lawyer Poul Effersøe and the politician Oliver Effersøe.
Effersøe was educated in Denmark and Sweden, and he worked as an agricultural supervisor. He was one of the nine men that convened the Christmas Meeting of 1888, which is considered the start of the Faroese independence movement; together with Jóannes Patursson, he is considered to have been a driving force in the movement. Effersøe and Patursson founded the Faroese Society, and Effersøe served as the editor of the society's newspaper, Føringatíðindi, which was the first newspaper written in Faroese. Effersøe also served as the editor of the newspapers Dúgvan and Dimmalætting, and he wrote for the theater, acted in the theater himself, and wrote poetry, including:
Effersøe appears as "the old poet" on page 35 of William Heinesen's novel Glataðu spælimenninir. A bust of Effersøe, created by Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen, was unveiled in 1933 in front of the parliament building in Tórshavn.
Rasmus Effersøe died in Tórshavn.