Edvard Hagerup Bull (23 January 1855 – 25 March
1938) was a Norwegian judge and politician for the
Conservative Party.
Personal life
He was
born in Bergen
as the son
of Colonel Jens Munthe Bull (1815–1905) and
his wife Johanne Margrethe Hagerup (1817–1888). His brother
Schak Bull was an architect, and his
maternal grandfather was politician
Edvard Hagerup. He was also a nephew of
composer
Ole Bull and architect
Georg Andreas Bull, and cousin of
composer
Edvard Grieg.
In June 1880 he married Theodora Kraft. Both their son
Sverre Hagerup Bull and their grandson
Edvard Hagerup Bull
became composers.
Career
Edvard
Hagerup Bull took his secondary education at Bergen Cathedral
School
in 1872, enrolled as a student and graduated with
the cand.jur. degree in 1876. He
was hired as an attorney in the law firm of
Emil Stang, and worked there from 1877 to 1879.
In July 1879 he was hired in the
Ministry of the Interior,
moving to the
Ministry of
Finance the next year. Here, he was promoted to assistant
secretary in 1882 and deputy under-secretary of State in 1888. He
had been acting deputy under-secretary since 1887. He stayed in
this position until 1893, except for the period between 6 June 1889
and 7 July 1889, when he was acting
Minister of Finance.
In October
1893 he became acting assessor of the
Supreme
Court
. In January 1895 this position was made
permanent. He stayed in this position until January 1918, except
for a period between 1905 and February 1907.
In March
1905, when the cabinet Michelsen
assumed office, Bull had been appointed a member of the Council of
State Division in Stockholm
. He left on 6 June as the
Union between Sweden and
Norway was unilaterally dissolved by Norway. Instead, Bull was
brought home to the newly independent state of Norway to become
Minister of
Justice and the Police. He stayed in this position until 26
November the same year, when he was appointed
Minister of Finance and
Customs. He left after slightly less than a year, on 6 November
1906. He was preceded by
Christian
Michelsen and succeeded by
Abraham
Berge, both of whom were
Prime Ministers at one point.
Having left the Supreme Court in 1918, he later returned to
politics to serve as Minister of Finance and Customs in the
first cabinet Bahr
Halvorsen. This cabinet existed exactly for one year, from 21
June 1920 to 21 June 1921. Again, he was preceded and succeeded by
two persons who also served as Prime Ministers,
Gunnar Knudsen and
Otto
Blehr respectively.
In addition, Bull was elected to the Norwegian Parliament for four
terms.
In
1903 he was
elected to serve the term 1904–1906 as the fifth representative of
Akershus
Amt
. He was not re-elected in
1906, but he returned
in 1910 for the constituency of
Aker.
He was then re-elected on two consecutive occasions. For the last
three terms he was the leader of the Conservatice Party
parliamentary group.
Bull was a member of several boards and committees, both public and
private. He was chairman of the board of the bank
Spareskillingsbanken from 1899 to 1928,
vice board chairman of
Centralbanken for Norge from 1900 to
1912 and board member of the publishing house
Gyldendal Norsk Forlag from 1922. In
addition, was the first chairman of the
Nordic cooperation organization
Foreningen Norden from 1919 to 1926.
He died in
1938 in Oslo
.
References