Vitus Bering
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Vitus Jonassen Bering (1681 - 1741)

Vitus Jonassen Bering aka Ivan Ivanovich Bering
Born in Horsens, Skanderborg, Denmarkmap
Ancestors ancestors
Brother of [half]
Husband of — married 18 Oct 1713 in Vyborg, Leningrad, Ruslandmap
Died at age 60 in Bering Island, Russiamap
Profile last modified | Created 22 Dec 2019
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Biography

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Vitus Jonassen Bering (baptised 5 August 1681 – 19 December 1741), also known as Ivan Ivanovich Bering, was a Danish cartographer and explorer in Russian service, and an officer in the Russian Navy. Quoting Wikipedia[1]:
Vitus Bering was born in the port town of Horsens in Denmark to Anne Pedderdatter and her husband Jonas Svendsen (a "customs inspector and churchwarden") and was baptized in the Lutheran church there on 5 August 1681.[2] He was named after a maternal great-uncle, Vitus Pedersen Bering, who had been a chronicler in the royal court, and was not long deceased at the time of Vitus Jonassen Bering's birth. The family enjoyed reasonable financial security, with two of Vitus' elder half-brothers both attending the University of Copenhagen. Vitus however did not and instead signed on at age 15 as a ship's boy.[2] Between 1696 and 1704, Bering travelled the seas, reaching India and the Dutch East Indies while also finding time to complete naval officer training in Amsterdam.[2] He would also claim later (and, it seems, not without some supporting evidence) to have served on Danish whalers in the North Atlantic, visiting European colonies in the Caribbean and on the eastern seaboard of North America.[3] It was in Amsterdam, however, that in 1704 and under the guidance of Norwegian-born Russian admiral Cornelius Cruys, Bering gained an officer's commission into the Russian navy, with the rank of sub-lieutenant.[2] He would be repeatedly promoted in Peter the Great's rapidly evolving navy, reaching the rank of second captain by 1720. In that time, it appears he was not involved in any sea battles, but commanded several vessels on potentially dangerous missions, including the transport of a ship from the Azov Sea on Russia's southern coast to the Baltic on her northern coast.[2] His work in the latter stages of the Great Northern War (ending in 1721), for example, was dominated by lightering duties.[4]

"On 8 October 1713, Bering married Anna Christina Pülse; the ceremony took place in the Lutheran church at Vyborg, only recently annexed from Sweden. Over the next 18 years, they had nine children, four of whom survived childhood.[4] During his time with the Russian navy – particularly as part of the Great Northern War – he was unable to spend much time with Anna, who was approximately eleven years Bering's junior and the daughter of a Swedish merchant. At the war's conclusion in 1721, Bering was not promoted like many of his contemporaries.[4] The omission proved particularly embarrassing when, in 1724, Anna's younger sister Eufemia upstaged her by marrying Thomas Saunders, already a rear-admiral despite a much shorter period of service. In order to save face, the 42-year-old Bering decided to retire from the navy, securing two months' pay and a notional promotion to first captain. Shortly after, the family – Bering, his wife Anna, and two young sons – moved out of St. Petersburg to live with Anna's family in Vyborg. After a period of joblessness lasting five months, however, Bering (keenly aware of his dependents), decided to reapply to the Admiralty. He was accepted for a renewed period of active service the same day.[4] By 2 October 1724, Bering (retaining the rank of first captain he had secured earlier in the year) was back on the sea, commanding the ninety-gun Lesnoe. The Tsar would soon have a new command for him, however.[4]

Vitus was born in 1681. He is the son of Jonas Svendsen and Anna Petersdatter Bering. He passed away in 1741.

Wikipedia: Vitus Bering

Dansk Biografisk Leksikon: Vitus Bering

Spouse: Anna Christina Pülse (*1692) Married 8 Oct 1713 Vyborg, Vyborgsky, Leningrad, Russia

Sources

  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitus_Bering
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Frost, Ocrutt William, ed. (2003). Bering : the Russian discovery of America, pp. 19–22
  3. Frost, Ocrutt William, ed. (200). Bering : the Russian discovery of America, pp. 29–31
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Frost, Ocrutt William, ed. (200). Bering : the Russian discovery of America, pp. 26–28




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