Recent from talks
Knowledge base stats:
Talk channels stats:
Members stats:
Nikolai von Bunge
Nikolai Karl Paul von Bunge, known in Russian as Nikolai Khristianovich Bunge (Russian: Николай Христианович Бунге; 23 November [O.S. 11 November] 1823 – 15 June [O.S. 3 June] 1895), was a Russian economist, academic and statesman who served as the minister of finance of the Russian Empire from 1881 to 1886. He is known as the preeminent architect of Russian capitalism under the reign of Alexander III. He was thus an economic liberal.
Bunge was born on 23 November [O.S. 11 November] 1823 in Kiev, in the Russian Empire, in a family of German origin . He was the second son of the physician Christian Gottlieb von Bunge, a specialist in pediatric diseases, and his second wife Katharina von Gebner. On his father's side of the family he was a descendent of the Lutheran Bunge family of East Prussian origin, and was a second generation of the Kievan branch. His grandfather, Georg Friedrich Bunge moved from the Stallupönen to Kiev sometime in the 18th century.
He graduated with a gold medal from the First Kiev Gymnasium and later completed the Faculty of Law at St. Vladimir University in 1845, earning a Candidate of Law degree.
In 1847, he obtained a Master’s degree in State Law with his dissertation A Study of the Principles of Peter the Great's Commercial Legislation. He earned a Doctorate in Political Science in 1850 with his dissertation The Theory of Credit.
On 31 October 1845, Bunge began teaching laws of state administration at the Nizhyn Lyceum of Prince Bezborodko. He became a professor on 19 December 1847 and served until 31 October 1850, lecturing on finance and financial law. In 1850, he was also appointed acting adjunct professor at St. Vladimir University in the Department of Political Economy and Statistics. In 1852, he defended his dissertation On the Theory of Credit, earning a Doctorate in Political Science and was confirmed as an extraordinary professor. On March 26, 1854, he became an ordinary professor. In 1858, he also began lecturing on financial legislation at the university.
On 4 December 1859, Bunge was elected a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
Bunge served his first tenure as rector of St. Vladimir Imperial University from 1859 to 1862. From 1863 to 1864, Bunge was the deputy grand tutor and thought financial theory and political economy to Tsarevich Nicholas Alexandrovich, the son of Alexander II. In 1869, he became an ordinary professor in the Department of Police Law at St. Vladimir University effectively teaching economic policy. Bunge served his second term as rector of his alma mater from 1870 to 1875, and a third term from 1878 to 1880 after which he took a break from academia.
He returned to academia in 1887 and lectured on political economy, statistics, and finance to Grand Duke Nicholas Alexandrovich, the future Emperor Nicholas II, until 1889.
Hub AI
Nikolai von Bunge AI simulator
(@Nikolai von Bunge_simulator)
Nikolai von Bunge
Nikolai Karl Paul von Bunge, known in Russian as Nikolai Khristianovich Bunge (Russian: Николай Христианович Бунге; 23 November [O.S. 11 November] 1823 – 15 June [O.S. 3 June] 1895), was a Russian economist, academic and statesman who served as the minister of finance of the Russian Empire from 1881 to 1886. He is known as the preeminent architect of Russian capitalism under the reign of Alexander III. He was thus an economic liberal.
Bunge was born on 23 November [O.S. 11 November] 1823 in Kiev, in the Russian Empire, in a family of German origin . He was the second son of the physician Christian Gottlieb von Bunge, a specialist in pediatric diseases, and his second wife Katharina von Gebner. On his father's side of the family he was a descendent of the Lutheran Bunge family of East Prussian origin, and was a second generation of the Kievan branch. His grandfather, Georg Friedrich Bunge moved from the Stallupönen to Kiev sometime in the 18th century.
He graduated with a gold medal from the First Kiev Gymnasium and later completed the Faculty of Law at St. Vladimir University in 1845, earning a Candidate of Law degree.
In 1847, he obtained a Master’s degree in State Law with his dissertation A Study of the Principles of Peter the Great's Commercial Legislation. He earned a Doctorate in Political Science in 1850 with his dissertation The Theory of Credit.
On 31 October 1845, Bunge began teaching laws of state administration at the Nizhyn Lyceum of Prince Bezborodko. He became a professor on 19 December 1847 and served until 31 October 1850, lecturing on finance and financial law. In 1850, he was also appointed acting adjunct professor at St. Vladimir University in the Department of Political Economy and Statistics. In 1852, he defended his dissertation On the Theory of Credit, earning a Doctorate in Political Science and was confirmed as an extraordinary professor. On March 26, 1854, he became an ordinary professor. In 1858, he also began lecturing on financial legislation at the university.
On 4 December 1859, Bunge was elected a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
Bunge served his first tenure as rector of St. Vladimir Imperial University from 1859 to 1862. From 1863 to 1864, Bunge was the deputy grand tutor and thought financial theory and political economy to Tsarevich Nicholas Alexandrovich, the son of Alexander II. In 1869, he became an ordinary professor in the Department of Police Law at St. Vladimir University effectively teaching economic policy. Bunge served his second term as rector of his alma mater from 1870 to 1875, and a third term from 1878 to 1880 after which he took a break from academia.
He returned to academia in 1887 and lectured on political economy, statistics, and finance to Grand Duke Nicholas Alexandrovich, the future Emperor Nicholas II, until 1889.
