Louis Zachariasen
Quick Facts
Biography
Louis Christian Oliver Zachariasen known as Louis Zachariasen (21 January 1890 in Kirkja, Fugloy – 30 August 1960) was a Faroese writer and politician for the New Self-Government party. He was the first deputy prime minister of the Faroe Islands after the island received home rule in 1948.
Zachariasen received a degree as a schoolteacher from the Faroese Teachers School in Tórshavn in 1911, he attended a folk high school in Denmark in 1915, in 1918 he received his examen artium, and in 1924 he received a master of science in engineering (Danish: cand.polyt.) from Polyteknisk Læreanstalt in Copenhagen. He moved back to the Faroe Islands, where he was employed by the Faroese Telephone Company (Telefonverk Føroya Løgtings) in 1925, and he served as the CEO of the company from 1936 to 1952. He was also the president of the Collegium Academicum Faeroense from 1933 to 1942.
Faroese language conflict
Zachariasen took active part in the Faroese language conflict. He and other worked for the rights to use the Faroese language in all official matters. He had a degree as a school teacher, but he refused to teach the Faroese children in the Danish language, as the law ordered him to do. He therefore stopped working as a teacher in protest and moved to Denmark for some years in order to get another education. He also took active part in the Faroese language conflict by writing poems, plays, novels and other texts in Faroese.
Family
His parents were both from the island Fugloy; they were Malena Frederikka Simonsen from Hattarvík and Símun Mikkjal Zachariasen from Kirkja. His brother, Símun Petur Zachariasen, was also a politician and member of the Faroese parliament. Louis Zachariasen was the grandfather of the Tjóðveldi politician Kristina Háfoss. Louis Zachariasen married Kristina Frederikka Hentze from Sandur, and they lived in Tórshavn.