Edmund Bourke inherited a considerable fortune from his father and pursued a career as a Danish diplomat. In 1789 he became
chargé d'affaires to Poland and from 1790 to 1792 he was envoy to Poland, where he won the goodwill of
King Stanislaus, who made him a knight of the
Order of the White Eagle. In 1792 Bourke was sent as an envoy to the
Kingdom of Naples, in 1797 to Stockholm and in 1801 to Spain, and he resided in Madrid for several years. In appreciation of his work, Bourke was made a
Chamberlain in 1793 and in 1811 was awarded the Grand Cross of the
Order of the Dannebrog. In January 1814 Bourke negotiated the
Treaty of Kiel with Sweden and England. Bourke showed skill and determination despite Denmark's poor negotiating position, having been on the losing side before switching to the Allied side after the
Battle of Leipzig. Under the treaty the United Kingdom returned all occupied Danish possessions other than the island of
Heligoland, and the Danish king ceded
Norway to the Kingdom of Sweden. On 8 February Russia was added to the peace treaty at Hanover. Bourke succeeded in obtaining as tolerable terms as possible, so that, for example, part of the Danish-Norwegian government debt was transferred to Norway by its separation from Denmark, and that the Faroe Islands, Iceland and Greenland remained with Denmark. Bourke undeniably was assisted by the fact that the Swedish negotiator had no idea that these islands had previously belonged to Norway. The exemption formulated by Bourke was an addition to the Swedish draft treaty but the desire to clarify the exception of the Atlantic islands seems to have arisen as a consequence of English policy. Bourke became a
Danish Privy Councillor in recognition of his work. Later Bourke was sent to the English court and in 1820 to France. However, Bourke quickly died in 1821 and was buried in
Père-Lachaise Cemetery in
Paris. ==Personal life==