Jacob Breda Bull
Jacob Breda Bull (28 March 1853 – 7 January 1930) was a Norwegian author.
Bull is best known for the novel Vesleblakken and for other novels and stories about descriptions of folk life in the Østerdalen valley. He also wrote historical novels, contemporary novels and poetry.[1] Bull was born in Rendalen, the son of the priest Matthias Bull (1815-1876) and Henriette Magrethe Breda. As a student he received the university grade “haud laudibilis” (not without praise) in May 1876, and then served a year as a teacher at Nickelsen’s Girl’s School in Kristiania. In April 1878 he founded the newspaper Dagen ('The Day') and subsequently earned his living as a journalist. He served as leader of the Norwegian Authors' Union from 1900 to 1903.[2][3]
He married Gunvor Sophie Rytter Saws (1843–1882) on 29 December 1876, and was married a second time with Anna Maria Augusta Bergløf (born in Stockholm 1855) on 9 January 1883. He was the father of Olaf Bull and grandfather of Jan Bull, both poets.
The old rectory in Rendalen, where he grew up, is now Bull's Museum, a biographical and cultural history museum. Rendalen municipality has since 1997 yearly awarded Vesleblakkenprisen, named after one of Bull's work, to individuals or organizations who have excelled in altruistic work.[4]
Filmography
- Glomdalsbruden (directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer, 1926)
References
- ↑ Bach, Giovanni (1938). The History the Scandinavian Literatures. The Dial Press. ISBN none.
- ↑ Larson, Karen (1948). A History of Norway. Princeton University Press. ISBN none.
- ↑ Derry, T.K. (1972). A History of Modern Norway: 1814—1972. Clarendon Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-822503-2.
- ↑ Vesleblakkenprisen til "22. juli-frivillige" (Norwegian) Rendalen municipality, retrieved 22 June 2013
External links
- Digitized books by Bull in the National Library of Norway
- Works by Jacob Breda Bull at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Jacob Breda Bull at Internet Archive
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