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Orgo-Life the new way to the future Advertising by AdpathwayAfter tragedy struck Birthe Svendsdatter, she threw herself from the window and ended up with a limp and a brain injury. Called Halte-Birthe because of her limp, she is said to haunt Fossesholm Manor to this day.
At Fossesholm Manor in Vestfossen, Buskerud, love is said to have left a wound that time itself could not heal. This was the main estate of the Foss estate , which was united in 1541–1548 by the lord of Akershus, Peder Hanssøn Litle , to gain control over the profitable sawmilling business in the area.
Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Norway
When night settles over the old estate and the trees cast long, trembling shadows across the empty buildings, some claim that a figure still moves behind the upstairs windows. She limps. She waits. And she remembers.
Fossesholm: It is said that a limping ghost of a girl who used to live at Fossesholm manor in Vestfossen is haunting it. //Source: WikimediaA Broken Promise
In the mid eighteenth century, Birthe Svendsdatter lived a life of privilege as the daughter of a wealthy family. Or was she? Some say that she was actually a servant girl at Fossesholm in the 18th century. And if not, she certainly became one after her tragedy.
Her future should have been secure, but her heart led her elsewhere. To a German officer in some versions of the legend that her parents didn’t think was good enough to marry. She secretly held her own wedding in the forest, a place between Lier and Røyken.

But the ending wasn’t a happy ever after though. What happened is not known. Was she tormented by her parents who when they learned about the wedding, made her life a misery? Was she betrayed by the man she loved and carrying his child, Birthe saw no escape from her shame and despair. In a moment of desperation, she threw herself from a second floor window at Fossesholm Manor.
Death did not claim her that night.
Instead, Birthe survived with terrible consequences. The fall left her permanently crippled. She lost both her sanity and the child she carried. What was meant to be an ending became a fate many would consider worse than death.
Legend has it that after the brain damage, she could not count beyond three. People are said to have teased her by asking how many chickens there were on the farm. To this, Birthe is said to have replied “one, two, three in a heap”. It is said that she was treated with great respect by the manor house, but was unpopular among the other servants because she had been asked to gossip if someone was not doing their job.
The Ghost from the Tapestry: One of the motifs shows a lady standing bent forward and pointing at the chickens and turkeys that are tripping around her. The lady’s name was Birthe and was called hen-Birthe or lame-Birthe. She is supposed to be haunting the manor house.After this, her husband also leaves her and travels back to Germany. Once home in Germany, he feels guilty, sits down to write a letter and the rescuer is again Cappelen at Fossesholm. He writes to Cappelen and asks if he can use Birthe on the estate. We will never know what Cappelen sends in response to Germany, but Cappelen builds a small house a short distance out towards Lake Eikeren where Birthe can move in. Birthe does not want that, she wants to live with Cappelen and his wife at Fossesholm.
A Life Reduced to Shadows
At the time, Fossesholm was owned by Gabriel Cappelen, who took pity on Birthe and allowed her to remain on the estate. Some say that he was the one who stepped in and convinced the priest to marry the two lovers.
Despite her background and wealth, her life was reduced to that of a servant. The renowned artist Eric Gustav Tunmarch was commissioned to paint her, and the image still hangs on the manor walls today.

In the artwork, Halte Birthe appears bent and broken, dressed in servant’s clothing, feeding the farm’s chickens and turkeys. This despite the fact that she owned chests filled with fine dresses she would never wear again. It is a portrait not of dignity, but of quiet humiliation and loss.
Birthe died at 64 in 1788, recorded in church books as a pauper. But many believe her story did not end there.
The Window on the Second Floor
Locals whisper that Birthe never truly left Fossesholm. Late at night, when the manor stands silent and abandoned, witnesses claim to see a figure in the second floor window. A woman who moves unevenly, forever marked by her fall. This is where she leapt. This is where her life was broken.
Some say her ghost is drawn back to that window again and again, trapped in the moment when love failed her and despair took hold. A reminder that not all ghosts are born from violent death. Some are created by lives that were allowed to continue, long after they should have ended.
At Fossesholm, Birthe Svendsdatter is remembered not as the woman she was, but as the limping ghost she may still be.
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References:
FLERE GJENFERD SOM OGSÅ VILLE VÆRE MED – Issuu
«Halte-Birthe» Eller «Hønse-Birthe» Fra Vestfossen – Sagnfigur Og Historisk Skikkelse – Historier.no


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