Edouard Bunge
Édouard Gustav Bunge was a Belgian businessman, banker, and philanthropist. He was a close associate of Leopold II and one of the main investors in the Anglo-Belgian India Rubber Company and the Société Anversoise du Commerce au Congo, which exploited rubber in the Congo Free State.
Early life
Bunge was born on 16 October 1851, in Antwerp in the Flemish Region of Belgium. He was a son of Charles Gustave Bunge and Laura Bunge.His brother, Ernest Bunge, was the father of Ivan Bunge of Le Havre, and the grandfather of Gerard Michel Bunge. His maternal grandparents were Georg Friedrich Fallenstein and Elisabeth Fallenstein. Through his aunt, Helene Fallenstein, he was a first cousin of the prominent German sociologist and historian Max Weber and economist Alfred Weber.
Career
Bunge began working for the family business, today known as Bunge Limited, which had been founded by his grandfather, Johann Peter Gottlieb Bunge, in Amsterdam in 1818 as an import-export business.In 1859, Édouard relocated the family company to Antwerp. Edouard's brother Ernest brought the company into Argentina in 1884 and, in 1905, the business extended to Brazil and later on to the United States.
Personal life
In 1886 Bunge was married to Marie-Sophie Karcher. Together, they were the parents of:- Sophia-Laura Bunge, who married Felix Rhodius.
- Dorothée Emilie Bunge, who married Victor Théodore Bracht.
- Erica Bunge, who married Milton McIntyre Brown.
- Eva Maria Bunge, who married Andrew James Widderson, OBE.
- Hilda Bunge, who married American industrialist William Hallam Tuck in Antwerp in 1920. He was a son of Judge Somerville Pinkney Tuck, and brother to Ambassador Somerville Pinkney Tuck and businessman Alexander J. M. Tuck.