Tord Hagen

Tord Bernhard Hagen (19 January 1914 – 2008) was a Swedish diplomat and ambassador.

Biography

Early life and education

Tord Bernhard Hagen was known to his friends as Bill, a nickname given to him as a young student in Uppsala. He lost his father early and his mother Ellen Hagen raised him and his sister Helga while pursuing a career in politics.

Career

After graduating from Uppsala University, Bill went on to pursue a career as a diplomat by joining the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs. His first deployment was at the Swedish embassy in London where he directly experienced the outbreak of World War II and the subsequent German bombings. He served as an attaché at the embassy from April 1939 to 1943. He also spent a few months in 1939 as substitute to the general counsel in Dublin.

Bill would continue his career by spending the majority of his life abroad. In the forties and fifties he served at the Swedish legations in Ankara, Prague and Bonn. In Prague, he experienced the rise of communist influence in Eastern Europe and in Bonn he saw the development of Western European cooperation.

His first position as ambassador came when Bill was offered to head the installation of a new embassy in Bangkok. He spent five years in Southeast Asia from 1959 to 1964 as ambassador of Thailand, also overseeing Cambodia, Burma and Vietnam. Bill then spent two years working at the ministry's headquarters in Stockholm before taking over the position as ambassador of Egypt in Cairo, where he also oversaw Sudan and Somalia. In Egypt Bill experienced several turbulent incidents such as the Six-Day War and the assassination of prime minister Wasfi al-Tal of Jordan. After six years in Cairo (1966–72) Bill and the family returned to Europe where Bill served as ambassador to the Netherlands 1972-77 and ambassador to Denmark 1977-80.

Despite retiring from the Ministry for Foreign Affairs in 1980 Bill continued working as he was appointed senior advisor to Volvo International where he spent several years working in Geneva and also made extensive travels to the Middle East.

After ending his assignment at Volvo Bill began penning his memoirs which resulted in the book Ett liv i krig och fred (A life in war and peace) which was published in 2000.

In June 1995 Bill appeared in the BBC documentary Myths and memories of World War 2 discussing the potential peace-treaty between England and Germany in 1940.

Marriage and children

In 1944 and 1946 Bill and his first wife Lena saw the birth of their children Robert and Cecilia. Bill married his second wife Inga in 1966 and their son Bernhard was born in 1969.

Death and afterward

Bill died quietly in his home in March 2008 at the age of 94.

gollark: +>eval_silent insult(["beekeeping"]).then(x=>m.channel.send(x))
gollark: +>eval_silent insult(["beekeeping"]).then(x=>m.channel.send(x))
gollark: "go produce a world-renowned piece of artwork"
gollark: "go make a POST request using HTTP/1.0"
gollark: "go upload your consciousness into the osmarks.tk mainframe"

References

    Diplomatic posts
    Preceded by
    Klas Böök
    Ambassador of Sweden to Thailand
    1959–1964
    Succeeded by
    Åke Sjölin
    Preceded by
    None
    Ambassador of Sweden to Burma
    1959–1964
    Succeeded by
    Åke Sjölin
    Preceded by
    None
    Ambassador of Sweden to Vietnam
    1960–1964
    Succeeded by
    Åke Sjölin
    Preceded by
    None
    Ambassador of Sweden to Cambodia
    1961–1964
    Succeeded by
    Lennart Petri
    Preceded by
    Adolf Croneborg
    Ambassador of Sweden to Egypt
    1966–1972
    Succeeded by
    Lars von Celsing
    Preceded by
    ?
    Ambassador of Sweden to Sudan
    1967–1972
    Succeeded by
    Lars von Celsing
    Preceded by
    ?
    Ambassador of Sweden to Somalia
    1967–1972
    Succeeded by
    Sven Fredrik Hedin
    Preceded by
    Karl-Gustav Lagerfelt
    Ambassador of Sweden to the Netherlands
    1972–1977
    Succeeded by
    Nils-Olov Hasslev
    Preceded by
    Hubert de Bèsche
    Ambassador of Sweden to Denmark
    1977–1980
    Succeeded by
    Carl Swartz
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