Olfert Fischer
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Vice-Admiral Johan Olfert Fischer (4 August 1747 – 18 February 1829) was a Danish naval officer. He commanded the Dano-Norwegian fleet against British forces under Lord Nelson during the Danish defeat at Copenhagen on 2 April 1801.[1]
Life and career
Johan Olfert Fischer was born in Copenhagen in 1747,[2] the son of Vice-Admiral Olfert Fas Fischer whom he followed to a naval career.[3] While still a young man, his rise through the military ranks was set back and almost destroyed in an incident with a prostitute while he was on guard duty on the island of Holmen off Copenhagen. The prostitute compounded Fischer's disgrace by accusing him of violent assault and her charges were believed by a military court: Fischer, then a lieutenant, was punished and demoted back to common seaman for a period of one year.[4]
By 1784, however, Fischer had rebuilt his reputation enough to be promoted to captain, and he was dispatched to the West Indies as commander of the warship Bornholme.[2] It was during this three-year mission that he first met — on friendly terms — his future foe Nelson, then a captain aboard HMS Boreas.[2][5]
Battle of Copenhagen
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Later life
Fischer, who was wounded in the battle, was praised as a national hero and bemedaled by the Danish crown for his bravery.[7] Nelson himself, who had at that time been involved in over a hundred actions, pronounced that the battle was the fiercest he had ever fought.[8]
Fischer remained with the navy and was elevated to the rank of Vice Admiral.[2] He died on 18 February 1829 and was buried in the churchyard of the Reformed Church, Copenhagen.[9]
Legacy
Although some contemporary scholars have criticized Fischer's reputation and minimized his significance,[4] he remains a military hero in Denmark. Among ships named for him, the coastal defense monitor Olfert Fischer was one of the main ships of the Royal Danish Navy (RDN) before World War I.[10] It was first laid down at Copenhagen in 1900[11] and commissioned to service in 1903.[12] The vessel took part in the coronation celebrations of King George V in June 1911, representing Denmark at the naval ceremonies in Spithead.[13] The modern Olfert Fischer (F355) is a Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities". of the RDN, commissioned to service in 1981.[14] In addition to coastal duties, this ship served among allied forces in the Persian Gulf during the conflicts of 1990[15] and 2003.[16]
Fischer is commemorated in the composition The Hope by Frederik Magle which was commissioned by the Admiral Danish Fleet and the Reformed Church in Copenhagen. The Hope was premiered on 1 and 2 April 2001, marking the 200th anniversary of the battle of Copenhagen.[17][18]
References
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Further reading
- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". One copy extant in the Royal Danish Library (#KGL01002580387).
- Thomas Lyngby, Søren Mentz, Søren Nørby & Jakob Seerup: Danmarks største søhelte, Copenhagen, Gads Forlag, 2010, 280 pages. Template:In lang Template:ISBN.
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- Pages with script errors
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- 1747 births
- 1829 deaths
- 18th-century Royal Dano-Norwegian Navy officers
- 19th-century Royal Dano-Norwegian Navy officers
- Royal Dano-Norwegian Navy admirals
- 19th-century Royal Danish Navy admirals
- Danish naval commanders of the Napoleonic Wars
- Danish Calvinist and Reformed Christians