Nomination for Nobel Peace Prize |
Year: | 1913 |
Number: | 17 - 1 |
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Nominee 1:
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Name: | Sir Ralph Norman Angell Lane |
Gender: | M |
Year, Birth: | 1872 |
Year, Death: | 1967 |
Profession: | Journalist, editor, author and lecturer. |
Country: | UNITED KINGDOM (GB) |
Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 1933 |
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Nominee 2:
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Name: | Carl Sundblad |
Gender: | M |
Year, Birth: | 1849 |
Profession: | Teacher, editor and publisher. Peace activist. |
City: | Rönninge |
Country: | SWEDEN (SE) |
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Motivation: | Angell was nominated for his book "The Great Illusion" (1910). He claimed that it was an illusion that war could be profitable to a nation, and he also maintained that this illusion was going to lead Europe into a state of war.
Sundblad had actively worked for peace since 1885 when he founded a local peace association in Sweden. Between 1887 and 1894 he raised money to support the newly founded Swedish Peace and Arbitration League. He was chairman of the council of this league 1887-1896. Sundblad published the journal "Ned med Vapnen" 1893-1897 and from 1897 he edited and published the journal "Fredsfanan". He advocated peace and co-operation. |
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Nominator:
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Name: | Cornelius Bernhard Hanssen |
Gender: | M |
Profession: | Member of the Norwegian parliament. Member of the Nobel Committee (1913-1939). |
City: | Flekkefjord |
Country: | NORWAY (NO) |
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Comments: |
The nomination was one of three alternatives that Hanssen submited to the Norwegian Nobel Committee. The first alternative was a prize divided between the Danish Peace Association, the Norwegian Peace Association and the Swedish Peace and Arbitration League. The second alternative was a prize divided between Norman Angell and Carl Sundblad. The third alternative was Andrew Carnegie. |
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