Tsjalling Hiddes Halbertsma
Tsjalling Hiddes Halbertsma | |
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Born | 21 January 1792 Grou, Netherlands |
Died | 12 December 1852 Grou, Netherlands | (aged 60)
Occupation | Merchant, poet, writer |
Language | West Frisian, Dutch |
Nationality | Western Frisian |
Citizenship | Dutch |
Period | 19th century |
Genre | Poetry, short stories |
Literary movement | Romanticism |
Years active | 1817–41 |
Notable works | Rimen en Teltsjes |
Spouse |
Tetsje Sollema
(m. 1813; died 1836)Reinskje van der Goot
(m. 1837) |
Tsjalling Hiddes Halbertsma (West Frisian: [ˈtsjɔlɪŋ ˈhɪdəs ˈhɔlbǝtsma]; Dutch: Tjalling Hiddes Halbertsma [ˈtɕɑlɪŋ ˈɦɪdəs ˈɦɑlbǝrtsmaː]; 21 January 1792 – 12 December 1852)[1][2] was a Dutch Frisian writer, poet and merchant,[3][2][4] and the least well-known of the three Brothers Halbertsma.[5] During his life he won a certain amount of fame in and around Grou, for the poems and short stories he wrote,[1][2] and also because of his success as a businessman.[5] After his death some of his literary works were collected with those of his brothers Justus and Eeltsje[6] to be published in 1871 as the famous Rimen en Teltsjes.[7][8] It was only from 1918 onwards that more of Tsjalling Halbertsma's works were added to this collection.[9][2]
Life
Youth and background
Tsjalling Hiddes Halbertsma was born on 21 January 1792[1][2] in his parents' house on Kowemerk ("Cow Market") street[10] in the village of Grou, in the central part of the Dutch province of Friesland.[11] He was the son of the baker and small-time merchant[5][12][10] Hidde Joasts Halbertsma (1756–1809)[5][13] and his wife Ruerdtsje (or Riurtk)[10] Tsjallings Binnerts (1767–1809).[5][13][14] He had one elder brother, Justus (1789–1869),[15][16][10] and two younger brothers, Binnert (1795–1847),[5][16][10] and Eeltsje (1797–1858).[11][16][10] Two children who were born later died in early childhood,[16] the little boy in 1803,[10] and the little girl in 1805.[10] The brothers were very close, possibly as a consequence of the fact that both their parents died at a relatively young age in 1809, when Tsjalling was only seventeen years of age.[12][13][17] Justus, Tsjalling and Eeltsje, who, as authors, became known as the Brothers Halbertsma later in life,[18][4] were much like their father, while Binnert more resembled their mother.[5]
This mother, Ruerdtsje Binnerts, was a scion of a prominent family in Grou.
Nature
Tsjalling Halbertsma was, according to his brother Justus, an imitator of great skill, a trait he had inherited from their father.[1] Justus also wrote about him, "There was no greater lover of silliness and jokes in all of Friesland than my brother Tsjalling; but, mark this, always in the wasted hours. When it was time for business, all of the joking stopped, and then activity, policy, hard work and calculations were the order of the day from early in the morning to late in the evening."[1] One of his biographers (J. P. Wiersma) described Tsjalling Halbertsma as "a talented, conspicuous person, full of drollery, not without vanity, but original in thought and word, distinctive in all his doings, a trendsetter."[20] A different biographer (G. A. Wumkes) wrote about him: "Here the pen is wielded by a man of high character."[21]
Trade
When Hidde Halbertsma died, in January 1809,[17] and was followed in death by his wife Ruerdtsje Binnerts in December of that same year,[11][6] the Brothers Halbertsma became orphans at a young age. Justus, the eldest brother, was in Amsterdam at that time, studying to become a minister,[6] while Eeltsje, the youngest, was boarding in the provincial capital of Leeuwarden, where he attended the Latin school.[11] In consequence, it fell to Tsjalling to keep their father's bakery running with the help of their father's baker's mates, until the third brother, Binnert, was old enough to take over the business.[6]
After that, Tsjalling Halbertsma started to work for one of his uncles in Grou, who was a
In 1837, Halbertsma had himself a large new house built in Grou, something his brothers were rather boastful of in their letters.[1] He also dressed himself according to the latest fashion, leading to Eeltsje complaining, in 1841, that his brother had become a dandy.[1] But in the end Halbertsma miscalculated badly: when the shares in other businesses he had invested in dropped sharply in value in 1848, he panicked, sold out, and put all his money in rye. When subsequently the rye market also collapsed, he suffered heavy losses amounting to about half of his fortune.[1] This was a severe blow, especially to his ego, which he never truly recovered from.[1]
Family
In 1813, Halbertsma married Tetsje Sjollema (1793–1836). She was from Grou, and he had known her for all of his life.[1] A year after she died, he remarried, to Reinskje van der Goot (1807–1862), who was also from Grou.[1] When this second marriage was contracted, he ordered fifty flags to be hung out in the village, and he gave away a fat cow to the poor.[1] One of Halbertsma's sons from his first marriage, Johannes Tsjallings Halbertsma (1827–1884), took over the dairy trade after his father's death, and moved it to the city of Sneek.[24] There Halbertsma's grandsons Hylke (1857–1932) and Herrius (1864–1920) established the dairy Normandia in 1888.[24]
Authorship
Tsjalling Halbertsma began his career as a writer in 1817,

Tsjalling Halbertsma's
Halbertsma published a number of his works in
Death
Tsjalling Hiddes Halbertsma died on 12 December 1852 in his birthplace of Grou, when he was almost 61 years old.[1][2] When he was still alive, he had been the steadfast centre of the Halbertsmas of Grou, where his brothers Binnert and Eeltsje especially were often visiting and always welcome.[15] According to his brother Justus, the family became "a scattered herd" after his death,[15][23][28] and Eeltsje wrote to Justus: "I feel like a soldier who has seen his best comrade sink down next to him on the field of battle."[15][23][28]
Legacy
After the death of all three Brothers Halbertsma, their short fiction and poetry was gathered under the supervision of librarian and archivist Gerben Colmjon and bookseller and historian Wopke Eekhoff.[29][30] In 1871, it was published by the firm of J. de Lange in Deventer, under the title of Rimen en Teltsjes ("Rhymes and Tales").[7][2][31][12][32][30] Apart from a few of his poems and his part in De Skearwinkel fan Joutebaas ("Boss Joute's Barbershop"), Tsjalling Halbertsma works, however, remained outside of that collection.[2][23] It was not until the fourth reprint of Rimen en Teltsjes, which was published in 1918 by publisher and bookshop owner Rinse van der Velde from Leeuwarden, that the composition of the work was thoroughly adjusted.[9] At that time Tsjalling's contribution took a more visible form through the absorption of De Wiersizzerij fan Maaike Jakkeles ("The Fortune-telling of Maaike Jakkeles") and a number of shorter texts and poems.[9][2]
Today, Rimen en Teltsjes is seen as the national book of Western Frisian literature,
Bibliography
(of Tsjalling Halbertsma's Western Frisian-language oeuvre)
- 1817 – Brulloftsfers of Mallichheid by de Brulloft ("Wedding Poem" or "Silliness at the Wedding"; poem)
- 1829 – Sets en Tsjerk yn Snitser Merk ("Sets and Tsjerk at the Fair yn Sneek; poem)
- 1829 – In Priuwke út Reintsje de Foks ("A Taste from Reintsje the Fox"; translated passage from Van den vos Reynaerde)
- 1829 – Sjirk en Tryn ("Sjirk and Tryn"; poem)
- 1830 – De Bêste Freed yn Ljou'ter Merke ("The Best Friday on the Fair in Leeuwarden; poem)
- 1830 – De Brune en de Bles ("The Brown and the Blaze"; short story)
- 1830 – Liet foar de Fryske Sjitterij ("Song for the Frisian Citizen Soldiery"; poem)
- 1830 – Myn Reis mei Parsop nei de Stêd ("My Journey to Town with Pear Juice"; short story)
- 1830 – De Skutter ("The Citizen Soldier"; poem)
- 1832 – In Jûnpraatsje fan Oark en Sint ("A Talk in the Evening with Oark and Sint; dialogue)
- 1832 – It Paad nei de Jilddobbe ("The Path to the Money Pit"; short story)
- 1833 – An Menhear Frisius Stripsma ("To Mr. Frisius Stripsma"; short story in the form of a letter and an answering letter, both in City Frisian dialect)
- 1833 – Punthûn en Liuwe Lijer ("Voluptuary and Leo Simpleton"; tale)
- 1834 – De Brulloft ("The Wedding"; dialogue)
- 1834 – De Divel ("The Devil"; tale)
- 1834 – Yn 't Jier Doe't de Ko Bartele Hjitte ("In the Year When the Cow Was Called Barthold"; tale)
- 1834 – Op in Jûn ("Of an Evening"; tale)
- 1835 – De Skearwinkel fan Joutebaas ("Boss Joute's Barbershop; frame-story with several short stories and poems; with Justus Hiddes Halbertsma and Eeltsje Hiddes Halbertsma)
- 1835 – De Wiersizzerije fan Maaike Jakkeles ("The Fortune-telling of Maaike Jakkeles"; short story)
- 1837 – Yn de Grouster Weagerij ("In the Weigh-house of Grou"; speech)
- 1838 – Grouster Merk ("Fair in Grou"; speech)
- 1839 – Grouster Merke ("Fair in Grou"'; speech)
- 1840 – Grouster Merke ("Fair in Grou"; speech)
- 1841 – De Grouster Weachmasters oan de Merkegasten ("The Weigh-house Masters of Grou to the Visitors of the Fair"; speech)
- 1841 – Idaarder'diel ("Idaarderadeel", name of the historical municipality which included Grou; poem)
- 18?? – Master Doede fan Terbant Is Komd ("Master Doede of Terband Is Come"; tale)
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Breuker 1993, p. 591.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Breuker 2016, p. 1128.
- ^ Breuker 1993, pp. 591–592.
- ^ a b c d Jensma, p. 197.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Breuker 1993, p. 587.
- ^ a b c d e f g Wiersma, p. 9.
- ^ a b Breuker 1993, pp. 603–606.
- ^ Dykstra en Oldenhof, p. 37.
- ^ a b c Breuker 1993, p. 609.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Wiersma, p. 7.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Breuker 1993, p. 592.
- ^ a b c d e f Oppewal and Boorsma, p. 16.
- ^ a b c Terpstra, p. 317.
- ^ Wiersma, pp. 7–8.
- ^ a b c d Breuker 1993, p. 588.
- ^ a b c d Terpstra, p. 316.
- ^ a b Wiersma, pp. 8–9.
- ^ Hemminga, p. 56.
- ^ a b c Wiersma, p. 8.
- ^ Wiersma, p. 13.
- ^ Wumkes, p. 485.
- ^ Twerda, p. 296.
- ^ a b c d e f g Terpstra, p. 320.
- ^ a b Schroor, p. 1125.
- ^ a b c d e f g Dykstra en Oldenhof, p. 42.
- ^ Terpstra, o. 320.
- ^ a b Terpstra, p. 321.
- ^ a b Wiersma, p. 12.
- ^ Breuker 1993, p. 604.
- ^ a b Wiersma, p. 5.
- ^ a b c Dykstra and Oldenhof, p. 37.
- ^ Terpstra, p. 313.
- ^ Breuker 1993, pp. 594–596.
- ^ Wadman, p. 14.
Sources
- Breuker, Philippus H., Oer Skriuwers, Boek en Utjeften, in: Halbertsma, Brothers, Rimen en Teltsjes, Drachten (A.J. Osinga Utjouwerij), 1993, ISBN 9 06 06 64 892, pp. 587–613.
- Breuker, Philippus H., Halbertsma, Tsjalling Hiddes, in: Schroor, Meindert, ed., Nieuwe Encyclopedie van Fryslân, Gorredijk/Leeuwarden (Utjouwerij Bornmeer/Tresoar), 2016, ISBN 978-9 05 61 53 755, p. 1128.
- Dykstra, Klaes, and Bouke Oldenhof, Lyts Hânboek fan de Fryske Literatuer, Leeuwarden (Afûk), 1997, ISBN 9 07 00 10 526, pp. 37–42.
- Halbertsma, Brothers, Rimen en Teltsjes, Bolsward/Leeuwarden (A.J. Osinga Utjouwerij/R. van der Velde), 1958, no ISBN.
- Halbertsma, Brothers, Rimen en Teltsjes, Drachten (A.J. Osinga Utjouwerij), 1993, ISBN 9 06 06 64 892.
- Hemminga, Piet, Fryslân: Fêstens en Feroaring, in: Hiemstra, Sytze T., De Fryslannen, Leeuwarden (Frisian Council/Afûk), 2008, ISBN 978-9 06 27 37 734.
- Jensma, Goffe, Cultuur in Friesland en Friese Cultuur, 1795–1917, in: Frieswijk, Johan, et al., red., Geschiedenis van Friesland 1750–1995, Amsterdam/Leeuwarden (Uitgeverij Boom/Fryske Akademy), 1998, ISBN 9 05 35 23 685, pp. 172–212.
- Oppewal, Teake, and Pier Boorsma, Spiegel van de Friese Poëzie: Van de Zeventiende Eeuw tot Heden, Amsterdam (J.M. Meulenhoff B.V.), 1994, ISBN 9 02 90 47 569.
- Schroor, Meindert, ed., Nieuwe Encyclopedie van Fryslân, Gorredijk/Leeuwarden (Utjouwerij Bornmeer/Tresoar), 2016, ISBN 978-9 05 61 53 755.
- Terpstra, Pieter, Tweeduizend Jaar Geschiedenis van Friesland, Leeuwarden (Uitgeverij M.Th. van Seyen), no year, no ISBN, pp. 312–323.
- Twerda, Hendrik, Fan Fryslâns Forline, Bolsward (A.J. Osinga N.V.), 1968, no ISBN, pp. 296–299.
- Wadman, Anne, Frieslands Dichters, Leiden (L. Stafleu), 1949, no ISBN.
- Wiersma, J.P., Foarwurd and De Bruorren Halbertsma, in: Halbertsma, Brothers, Rimen en Teltsjes, Bolsward (A.J. Osinga N.V.), 1958, pp. 5–14.
- Wumkes, Geart Aeilco, Bodders yn de Fryske Striid, Bolsward (A.J. Osinga N.V.), 1926, no ISBN.