6 August] 1851 – 5 September 1919[1]) was the Minister of Interior of Russia from February 1905 until October 1905.
Graduate of the Imperial School of Law, he began work in the Tambov district court in 1871.
[2] Bulygin is most notable for the so-called 'Bulygin Constitution', developed in response to the 1905 Russian Revolution.
It did not satisfy those who wanted a fully legislative assembly, and Bulygin's opponents, discontented, advocated the strikes of September and October.
After these events, Bulygin (and Trepov) were sacked on 17 October 1905 and replaced by the reactionary Pyotr Nikolayevich Durnovo.