-
satire in
medieval Oslo. The
priest brothers Hans (1587–1648) and
Peder Povelsson Paus (1590–1653) from Oslo have long been
known as the family's earliest...
-
Cornelius Povelsson Paus (1662 – 1723) was a
Norwegian lawyer and
government official who
served as
governor and
district judge—i.e. the region's foremost...
- Sir Hans
Povelsson Paus (born 1656 in
Hjartdal – 18
March 1715) was a
Norwegian priest and poet. He was
parish priest in
Kviteseid from 1683
until his...
- Sir
Peder Povelsson Paus (1590 in Oslo – 21 July 1653, in Kviteseid), also
rendered as
Peter Paus and
known locally as Sir Per (Norwegian: herr Per),...
- Hans
Povelsson Paus the
Elder (1587 – 1648) was a
Norwegian priest. He grew up in Oslo
together with his brother,
fellow priest Peder Povelsson Paus (b...
- Hans
Povelsson Paus (1656–1715) was a
representative of the
Upper Telemark aristocracy of officials, an
elite of
priests and
lawyers ruling the region...
- was
almost certainly the
father of the
priests Hans
Povelsson Paus (1587–1648) and
Peder Povelsson Paus (1590–1653), two
brothers from Oslo who were the...
- the son of the
parish priest of Kviteseid, Hans
Povelsson Paus. His great-grandfather
Peder Povelsson Paus came to
Telemark in the
early 17th century...
- Maj
Hermansdatter (died 1736) from Denmark. He was the
grandson of Hans
Povelsson Paus and the great-grandson of the well-known Danish-Norwegian topographer...
- the case. He was
named after his grandfather,
district judge Cornelius Povelsson Paus, who
himself was
named after his grandfather,
timber trader in Skien...