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Melchior Falch : ウィキペディア英語版 | Melchior Falch Melchior Michaelsen Falch (1720 – September 14, 1791) was a Norwegian jurist, author, and judge from Øvre Amla (Amble) in the village of Kaupanger in the municipality of Sogndal, Sogn og Fjordane county. He was interested in promoting fisheries, and in 1775 he received an award for a work on Norwegian fisheries.〔(''Store norske leksikon'': Melchior Falch )〕〔(''Norsk biografisk leksikon'': Melchior Falch )〕 ==Family and education== Falch was the son of Michael Melchiorsøn Falch (died 1768) and Mette Marie Heiberg (1699–1766).〔 He received a law degree in Copenhagen in 1747, and on March 19, 1753 he married Anna Sophie Bitsch. Falch paid for the construction of a school in Bergen known as the Seminarium Fredericianum, in gratitude for which he was made the district magistrate for Sunnmøre in 1754.〔(Seminarium Fredericianum. )〕 He inherited the Heiberg estate in Øvre Amla from his father. The property was rented out from 1754 to 1779, while Falch lived in Borgund. On August 25, 1756 he married again, to Christi(a)ne Margrethe Hagerup (November 8, 1732 – 1795), and they had the following children: Anna Sophie Falch (1759–1830), Michael Melchiorsen Falch (1762–?), Hans Christian Falch (1764–?), Melchior Falch (1768–1849), and Cathrine Marie Helene Harboe Falch (1770–1854, who married Hans Knagenhjelm Daae). Falch's wife Christine was the daughter of Bishop Eiler Hagerup〔Erlandsen, Andreas. 1855. ''Biographiske Efterretninger om Geistligheden i Trondhjems Stift''. Christiania: Chr. Tønsbergs forlag.〕 and she was also the cousin of Hans Strøm. Falch was the brother-in-law of Hans Holtermann, who was married to an older daughter of Bishop Hagerup.
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