Aadel Brun Tschudi
Aadel Marie Brun Tschudi was a Chinese-born Norwegian geographer and sinologist who taught at the University of Oslo, successfully focusing on social geography. During a trip to East Asia in 1957, she contributed a series of reports to the Norwegian broadcaster NRK and on her return published her impressions of the country in Japan, soloppgangens land. She became involved in research projects in support of Botswana, Sri Lanka and her native China. From 1967 to 1973, she edited the Norwegian Journal of Geography and in 1977 became a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. That year, following the end of the Cultural revolution, she travelled back to Yiyang to meet her family, report on her visit in Gjensyn med Kina.
Early life, family and education
Born on 29 September 1909 in Taohualun in Yiyang, China, Aadel Marie Brun was the daughter of the missionary cleric Sigurd Brun and his wife Aagot née Lie, a teacher. When she was 15, she moved to Denmark where she completed her high school education in Fredrikstad in 1927 and went on to study philology at the University of Oslo. In June 1933, she married the theologian Stephan Tschudi, with whom she had three children. In 1951, she completed her studies in Oslo, specializing in geography and graduating as a Cand.phil., equivalent to a master's degree. In 1951–52, she studied Chinese at Harvard University.Career
During the lengthy period she spent at home as a housewife, she became active in Norway's women's organizations. In 1945 she was elected chair of the Oslo branch of the Norske Kvinnelige Akademikeres Landsforbund, an association linked to the International Federation of University Women. From the late 1940s and for the next 15 years, she became a frequent broadcaster on foreign affairs, especially in connection with China and East Asia. After travelling through East Asia in 1957, she made an extensive series of detailed reports on NRK radio. She also published her impressions of Japan in Japan, soloppgangens land.In 1960, Tschudi was engaged as a lecturer in geography at the University of Oslo. From 1970 to 1972, she lectured in sinology at the university's Østasiatisk institutt and in 1977 was elected a member of the Norwegian Academy of Sciences. Following the end of the Cultural revolution, in 1977 she travelled back to Yiyang to meet her family, report on her visit in Gjensyn med Kina.
She retired from the University of Oslo in 1979.