Ulla (Gully Cecilia) Bjerne-Biaudet (née Ohlsson ), known as Ulla Bjerne , ( ( 1890-03-01 ) 1 March 1890 – ( 1969-10-16 ) 16 October 1969) was a Swedish -born author who resided in Finland from 1922 onwards. She also wrote under the pen-names Ali Frost and Lars Doll .
17-720: Bjerre is a Danish surname. Notable people with the surname include: Andreas Bjerre (1879–1925), Swedish academic Jens Bjerre (disambiguation) , multiple people Jonas Bjerre (born 1976), Danish musician Jonas Buhl Bjerre (born 2004), Danish chess master Kenneth Bjerre (born 1984), Danish motorcycle speedway rider Kresten Bjerre (1946–2014), Danish footballer Lasse Bjerre (born 1993), Danish motorcycle speedway rider Morten Bjerre (born 1972), Danish handball player Poul Bjerre (1876–1964), Swedish psychiatrist Sys Bjerre (born 1985), Danish singer-songwriter [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with
34-500: A doctor. The relationship between the Poul and Andreas Bjerre was the subject of the 2008 historical novel Bära bud by Norwegian author Håkan Bravinger , which was based on the diaries kept by the two brothers as well as other historical documents. In the novel Bravinger portrays Andreas Bjerre's death, leaving a note for his wife Madeleine and for his mother. His brother Poul, for whom Andreas had often expressed great hatred in his diaries,
51-426: A noted author, pacifist, and anti-Nazist. Posse's mother Gunhild Wennerberg (1860-1925) married Andreas Bjerre's brother Poul the year after. In the same year Posse gave birth to their only child, Sören Christer Bjerre (1905-1967), who was declared insane in 1921 but eventually in adulthood became a journalist. Andreas Bjerre and Posse were divorced in 1912 and Bjerre married Baroness Ida Magdalena (Madeleine) Bennet
68-476: A relationship with a French merchant Berthold Dieden who paid for her travel to France, as well as becoming friends with the journalist and artist Iwar Donnér . Whilst in Paris she took up her studies again, and made the acquaintance of artists Nils Dardel and Tor Bjurström and the author Gustaf Hellström . Ulla Bjerne returned to Denmark where she became friends with lawyer and psychologist Andreas Bjerre . It
85-598: A student in Strängnäs from 1897, and received his bachelor's degree in Uppsala in 1900. In winter 1900-1901 he studied in Paris, and received his degree in law ( Juris utriusque kandidat ) in Lund in 1904, before studying in Berlin from late 1904 until 1906 under Franz von Liszt . He enrolled at Stockholm University in 1909 and received and his master's and doctorate degrees in law there in
102-520: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Andreas Bjerre Sören Andreas Bjerre , known as Andreas Bjerre , (21 March 1879 – 22 November 1925) was a Swedish academic specialising in criminal law and criminal psychology . Born in Göteborg in 1879, Andreas Bjerre was the son of Sören Bjerre, who was a rich butter-merchant, and Sophie Jörgensen. His brother was the psychologist Poul Bjerre (1876-1964). Andreas Bjerre studied as
119-473: Is portrayed as refusing to accept that it was suicide. Andreas Bjerre is portrayed as having dyslexia , and as someone who drank heavily and was known to frequent prostitutes. Ulla Bjerne Born Gully Cecilia Ohlson in 1890 in Söderhamn, her father was Vilgot Ohlson, a merchant and government official of the town. For the first six years of her life she was regularly ill, and her parents often argued. At
136-663: The Påhlmans Handelsinstitut she subsequently worked as a clerk for five years, working first in Malmö , then Trelleborg , and then emigrating to Copenhagen in Denmark, before finally ending up in Paris in the autumn of 1911. In Copenhagen she took up the name "Ulla", a name she already used at school, as her employers considered the name "Gully" to be a boy's name, and began using the surname "Bjerne". Whilst in Copenhagen she also began
153-667: The University of Dorpat (now known as Tartu) in Estonia, and became also the professor of legal philosophy there from 1921. In 1925 his work Bidrag till mordets psykologi was published, one of the first works on the subject of the psychology of murderers. It was later translated into German and English, with the English title being The Psychology of Murder . The book was based on interviews with convicts imprisoned for murder at Långholmen prison. In 1904 Bjerre married Countess Amelie Posse , later
170-441: The surname Bjerre . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bjerre&oldid=1097832681 " Categories : Surnames Danish-language surnames Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description
187-510: The Bonniers publishing house. Ingen mans kvinna has been described by Swedish literary scholar Kristina Fjelkestam as the first Swedish Künstlerroman in which the main protagonist was a woman. Due to occasional rejections that Bjerne's manuscripts received from Bonneirs due to poor sales figures, Bjerne later worked with the Finnish-Swedish publishing house Holger Schildts Förlag. After
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#1732863110725204-678: The age of 16 she was expected to leave home and fend for herself, however her father did not allow her to seek a career as a pianist, actress, or artist. For a time she worked as a governess in Skåne , and then as a companion lady (i.e., a servant) in Värmland . She then studied a course at the Påhlmans Handelsinstitut , a professional trade school in Stockholm, which was paid for with a loan from her uncle Carl Alfred Ohlson. Following her studies at
221-589: The army in spite of his advanced age. Her works, which often focused on behaviour considered "immoral" at the time, being relatively outspoken about sex, were often interpreted as being autobiographical, meaning that Bjerne herself was seen in a negative light. A number of her works were openly autobiographical, including Lustjakten (The Yacht, 1944), Livet väntar dej (Life Awaits You, 1955), Den glada otryggheten (The Happy Insecurity, 1958), Botad oskuld , (Cured Innocence, 1961), and Sardiska stigar (Sardinian Paths, 1963). These books were well received, though Bjerne
238-474: The end of the first world war Bjerne began travelling again, and met the doctor Léon Biaudet , with whom she settled in Lovissa, Finland from 1922 onwards. Despite living in Lovissa, Bjerne continued to travel regularly, including to North Africa, and numerous books were published during this period. Her travels were curtailed during the second world war during which time her husband was also called up for service with
255-462: The following year. He worked as a notary at the judge's office and also as a judge in the period 1907–8. During the years 1910-1915 Bjerre studied the psychology of criminals intensively in Swedish prisons, and was appointed to the board of the association of Swedish Criminologists where he also edited their journal Förhandlingar from 1915 to 1918. In 1919 Bjerre was made a professor of criminal law at
272-654: The same year. During the first world war Bjerre met the Swedish female author Ulla Bjerne , then living in Denmark. Bjerne later described Bjerre as one of only two men who had ever been important to her, the other being her husband Léon Biaudet . Bjerre resigned his position at Dorpat University in spring 1925 due to illness. He committed suicide in November 1925 in a guest-house in Tyinge through an overdose of veronal , in bed with his wife Madeleine embracing him. Poul Bjerre later accused Madeleine of murder as she had not called for
289-407: Was whilst Bjerne was in Denmark that she made her literary debut with the 1916 novel Mitt andra jag (My Other Self) which was published by Dahlbergs Förlag. Bjerne's books Dårarnes väg (The Path Of Fools, 1917), Ingen mans kvinna (No Man's Woman, 1919) and Blodets krav (Blood Cravings, 1920) were also published with Dahlbergs Förlag before they went bankrupt in 1920 and Bjerne was transferred to
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