Nils Ulrik Alfred Sinding-Larsen (5 June 1839 – 28 January 1911) was a Norwegian civil servant, teacher at the Military Academy, journalist and writer.
He finished his secondary education in 1855, then graduated with the cand.jur. degree in law in 1863. In his jurist career, he worked in the Ministry of the Army from 1863. In 1877, he became acting auditor for the Norwegian Cavalry and for Akershus garrison. He left these positions in 1901, but also tutored at the Norwegian Military Academy from 1889 to 1905. He was also a secretary for the executive committee of Kristiania city council from 1875 to 31 December 1896. He was also a member and secretary of Christiania Kunstforening.[1]
Sinding-Larsen wrote poems in newspapers and for stage performances, and published one poetry collection, For første gang in 1867. Between 1858 and 1873, he also wrote folk songs under the pseudonym Olaves Pedersen. They tell tales of different characters taken from Kristiania city, and he also used the Vika dialect for some of the characters, making the songs linguistically interesting.[1] He was one of the first writers to use a local dialect from Norway's capital.[4] The songs were published in a collected edition in 1903 with a foreword by Johan Storm.[1]
Sinding-Larsen died on 28 January 1911 in Kristiania.[1]
^"Kirsten Sinding-Larsen" (in Norwegian). Sinding-Larsen.no. Retrieved 10 June 2010. Note that the short biography is translated from Från eftersatt till eftersökt. Kvinnliga studerande på KTH 1897-1945.