Bering married Anne Nielsdatter, daughter of Niels Pedersen Aurilesius (1601–1634), rector of the University of Copenhagen, on 13 June 1652. She died in 1657. On 15 September 1663, he then married Gertrud Jørgensdatter, daughter of Jørgen Hansen (1613–1673) and Kirstine Knudsdatter (died 1702). In 1666, King Christian V granted him the
Klampenborg area north of Copenhagen for life. Bering constructed a small country house on the land and named it
Christiansholm after the king. The king also granted him another country estate, probably
Farumgård, shortly prior to his death in 1675. His great-nephew cartographer and sailor
Vitus Jonassen Bering (1681–1741) entered Russian service, and made himself a name as an explorer, commanding the
First Kamchatka Expedition and
Great Northern Expedition, where he perished at 60 years of age. Their similar names and the lack of the latter man's reliable portraits has led to a lot of confusion, and, until the explorer's remains were recovered in 1991, the portrait of his uncle was believed to belong to him. ==References==