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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Peace Prize 1902
Élie Ducommun, Albert Gobat
Élie Ducommun
Born: 19 February 1833, Geneva, Switzerland
Died: 7 December 1906, Bern, Switzerland
Residence at the time of the award: Switzerland
Role: Honorary Secretary, Permanent International Peace Bureau, Bern, Switzerland
Field: Peace movement

Biography
Élie
Ducommun (February 19, 1833-December 7, 1906), Swiss
journalist, eloquent lecturer, business executive, steadfast
advocate of peace, was born in Geneva, the son of a clock maker
whose original home was in Neuchâtel. Early in his boyhood
he gave evidence of his capacity to make the most of his
remarkable talent and intelligence by intense application.
Having completed his early studies in Geneva at the age of
seventeen, he obtained a post as tutor for a wealthy family in
Saxony, remaining there for three years and becoming expert in
the German language. Upon returning to Geneva, he taught in the
public schools for two years and then in 1855 at the age of
twenty-two, began his journalistic career with the editorship of
a political journal, the Revue de Genève. In one way
or another he was connected with journalistic enterprises for the
rest of his life. In 1865 he moved to Bern where he founded the
radical journal, Der Fortschritt [Progress], which was
also published in French under the title Progrès; in
1871-1872, he edited Helvétie; beginning in 1868, he
edited the news sheet, Les États-Unis d'Europe,
published by the Ligue internationale de la paix et de la
liberté [International League for Peace and Freedom]; and
after 1891, as head of the Permanent
Peace Bureau, he prepared or edited innumerable appeals,
pamphlets, reports, news sheets, and the like for the peace
societies and the international peace congresses.
He was, indeed, a «literary» man, absorbed for the most
part in journalism but finding time, also, to publish poetry and
to perform his duties as official translator for the National
Council. August Schou, director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute,
points out that Ducommun's writing often showed «striking
acuity of thought», citing a dialogue he wrote in 1901 in
which he refutes the notion current in that day that a war
between major powers would be short because of the
destructiveness of modern weapons, and predicts, in its stead, a
long «war of attrition with alternating advances and
retreats, and with operations bound up with a system of trenches
and strongpoints»1.
Ducommun was also a political figure of some consequence. In Bern
he was a member of the Grand Council for ten years; in Geneva,
prior to his leaving in 1865, he was a member of the Grand
Council for nine years, becoming vice-chancellor in 1857 and
chancellor of state of Geneva in 1862.
He was a business executive as well. For thirty years, beginning
in 1875, he was secretary-general of the Jura-Bern-Lucerne
railroad, or as it was later called after a merger, the
Jura-Simplon line. This position required, according to Frédéric Passy, «the
rarest qualities of exactitude, order, activity, and
firmness»2. When the line
was purchased by the state in 1903, Ducommun resigned.
Ducommun, meanwhile, gave virtually every spare moment at his
disposal to his work for peace, most notably after 1890 when he
consented to organize and to direct the International Bureau of
Peace. From the inception of the Bureau until his death, Ducommun
devoted himself, at his own insistence without remuneration, to
carrying out its purposes of uniting the many different peace
societies throughout the world, preserving archives, preparing
for the congresses, implementing their decisions, and acting as a
clearinghouse for all kinds of information about peace and the
activities on its behalf.
Élie Ducommun died at the age of seventy-three of a disease
of the heart and lungs.
| Selected Bibliography |
| Dictionnaire historique et biographique de la Suisse. Neuchâtel, 1924-. |
| Ducommun, Élie. Much of Élie Ducommun's correspondence is deposited in archives of the International Peace Bureau in Geneva, Switzerland. |
| Ducommun, Élie, Derniers sourires: Poésies précédées d'une notice biographique. Bern, 1908. |
| Ducommun, Élie, Discours sur l'œuvre de la paix prononcé à Genève le 23 mai 1893. Bern, 1893. |
| Ducommun, Élie, «The Permanent International Bureau of Peace», The Independent, 55 (March 19, 1903) 660-661. |
| Ducommun, Élie, Précis historique du mouvement en faveur de la paix. Bern, 1899. |
| Ducommun, Élie, Sourires: Poésies. Bienne, 1887. |
| Obituary, Journal de Genève (8 décembre 1906). |
| Obituary, Journal de la paix (11 décembre 1906). |
| Passy, Frédéric, «The Recipients of the Nobel Prize of Peace», The Independent, 55 (March 5, 1903) 554-557. |
1. Nobel:
The Man and His Prizes (Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1962), pp.
547-548.
2. «The Recipients of the
Nobel Prize of Peace», The Independent, 55 (March 5,
1903) 556.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1901-1925, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1902
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