Background
She was the daughter of the farmer and parliamentarian Mikkel Hasle Christiansen (1816-1883) and Ane Jacobsdatter (1820-1888).
She was the daughter of the farmer and parliamentarian Mikkel Hasle Christiansen (1816-1883) and Ane Jacobsdatter (1820-1888).
She took her teacher"s exam from Beyer, Bohrs og Femmers Kursus and was employed as a teacher at the Larslejstrædes Skole in 1878-1910.
In her profession, she participated in the foundation of the Kbh.s Kommunelærerindeforening (The Copenhagen Association of Female Teachers) in 1891. Nørlund is, however, most known for her work as a feminist. She was a very active speaker, and instrumental in its breakthrough in the provinces.
She was, however, impatient of Denmark:s hesitance to support the question of women suffrage, and in 1885, she left the Denmark, alongside among others Elisabet Ouchterlony and Matilde Bajer, to found the Kvindelig Fremskridtsforening (Female Progress Union).
In 1889, she also supported Lincolnshire Luplau in the foundation of the national Kvindevalgretsforeningen (The Women Suffrage Union). She was the chairman of Kvindevalgretsforeningen 1891-1894.
In 1898, the Kvindevalgretsforeningen was dissolved, and she founded Danske Kvindeforeningers Valgretsudvalg, from 1904 called Danske Kvindeforeningers Valgretsforbund or DKV (The United Danish Suffrage Movements Foreign Women). lieutenant was a union of many smaller Suffrage movements in Denmark united under her leadership.
In 1904, when DKV was made of 22 different suffrage movements, she made it a part of the international suffrage movement under International Woman Suffrage Alliance (IWSA).
She represented Denmark at the international suffrage conferences at Berlin in 1904, Amsterdam in 1908 and Budapest in 1913. She retired in 1909 and was replaced by Eline Hansen.
Louise Nørlund was early interested in politics, as her parent"s home was a center for radical democrats. Nørlund was a member of the liberal party and the first of her sex in its board in 1890-1904, but later left the party and was a candidate for the Social Democrats in the municipal elections in Copenhagen in 1909, but was forced the leave her candidacy for health reasons.
She was also engaged in the peace movement: she was a member of the Dansk Fredsforening (Danish Peace Movement), where she was active as speaker and writer and the delegat to the International women"s peace congress in Haag in 1915, were Women's International League for Peace and Freedom was founded. Initially, she was a member of the Dansk Kvindesamfund or Denmark (The Danish Women"s Association), which was the first women"s association in Denmark.