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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Peace Prize 1926
Aristide Briand, Gustav Stresemann
Aristide Briand
Born: 28 March 1862, Nantes, France
Died: 7 March 1932, Paris, France
Residence at the time of the award: France
Role: Part-originator of Locarno Pact and Briand-Kellogg Pact, Foreign Minister
Field: Negotiation

Biography
Aristide
Briand (March 28, 1862-March 7, 1932), while at the height of
his influence within the League of Nations, attended a dinner in
Geneva where the guests were given menu cards on which was
printed a cartoon depicting the statesmen of the world smashing a
statue of Mars while Briand, alone, talked to the god of war
trying to convince him to commit suicide1. The cartoon caught not only Briand's main
objective in public life - the elimination of war in
international relations - but also his method: his penchant for
personal diplomacy, his renowned persuasiveness, and his habit of
attacking the heart of a problem rather than its symbols or
symptoms.
Born in Brittany, Briand was endowed with a heritage containing
something of the peasant, something of the aristocrat, and a good
deal of the Breton. His father, a prosperous innkeeper, sent him
to school in Saint-Nazaire and then to the Nantes Lycée.
There he was warmly befriended by Jules Verne, then rising to
fame as a novelist and inventor. In A Long Vacation, a
novel for youngsters, Verne describes a thirteen-year-old boy
named «» Briant, he says, was audacious, quick at
repartee, a good chap, somewhat untidy, « intelligent but so
unwilling to waste good time studying that he was usually in the
last quarter of his form. Occasionally he would spurt into a
period of concentrated work, and then his quick understanding and
remarkable memory helped him outstrip the
rest.»2. Throughout his life
Briand read little but listened intently, never prepared a speech
but was, by common acknowledgment, the leading French orator of
his generation; he understood everything, so it was said, but
knew nothing.
Although Briand studied law and established a practice, he
preferred the profession of journalism to that of law. He wrote
for Le Peuple, La Lanterne, La Petite République, and
collaborated with Jean Jaurès in founding
L'Humanité, a socialist paper. A supporter of the
labor-union movement, Briand emerged as a leader in the French
Socialist Party after a speech at a congress of workingmen at
Nantes in 1894. He found his true calling in politics, however,
when, at the age of forty, he was elected to the Chamber of
Deputies in 1902. In the next thirty years he was premier of
France and a cabinet minister innumerable times3.
He achieved recognition almost immediately as the moving force of
the commission that prepared the law separating church and state.
He guided the legislation through the Chamber and in 1906 was
appointed to administer the law itself as minister of public
instruction and worship in Sarrien's cabinet. He was retained in
this post when Clemenceau formed a government later in that year,
was given the justice portfolio in Clemenceau's next government,
and in 1909 became premier for the first time.
Briand tended to be a political loner. In 1906 when he joined
Sarrien's «» government, he was expelled from the
Socialist Party. As premier he broke the railway workers' strike
in 1910 by the novel expedient of mobilizing the railway workers
who were still subject to military service. Since he never formed
a political party, he survived because of his power of
imagination, his mastery of procedure, his talent in oratory, and
his understanding of people, especially of the common man.
Briand, the enemy of war, was forced by the irony of events to
lead his nation during World War I for eighteen critical months
from October, 1915, to March, 1917. He devised and, despite
opposition from the French general staff, resolutely supported a
plan, ultimately a successful military venture, to strike Turkey,
Bulgaria, and Austria through Greece; he strengthened the French
high command; he helped to obtain a new ally in Italy.
Briand was not a member of the Clemenceau government which
conducted the negotiations for France at Versailles after the
war. When he resumed as premier in January of 1921, retaining for
himself the portfolio for foreign affairs, he tried to obtain a
settlement of the reparations issue; represented France at the
Washington Arms Conference; and negotiated a security pact with
Lloyd George at Cannes in 1922, resigning when he failed to
obtain its ratification.
Recalled to the foreign ministry by Painlevé in 1925, Briand
now entered upon five and a half years of highly successful
diplomacy. The first success was at Locarno. Briand seized upon
Stresemann's offer of a pact of mutual
guarantee and nonaggression, showed Austen Chamberlain how this proposal
would fit into his concept of regional, collective security
pacts, and during the conference itself, established the
atmosphere of informal amiability that eventually brought
understanding. On October 16, 1925, Briand, as foreign minister,
initialled and on December 1, as premier, signed the Locarno
Pact, which included various treaties and guarantees: four
arbitration treaties between Germany on the one hand and France,
Belgium, Poland, and Czechoslovakia on the other; two treaties
between France on the one hand and Poland and Czechoslovakia on
the other; Germany's western boundaries were guaranteed, the
Rhineland was to be demilitarized, war was renounced except in
extraordinary circumstances, and Germany was to join the League
of Nations. Locarno embodied the Briand spirit - the humanization
of politics.
With Locarno as a model, Briand sought to extend the arbitration
concept to the United States, proposing in 1927 that France and
the United States join in renouncing war as « instrument of
national policy» Frank B.
Kellogg countered with the suggestion of a multilateral
rather than a bilateral treaty, and on August 27, 1928, at the
Quai d'Orsay, fifteen nations signed the Pact of Paris, or
Kellogg-Briand Pact, for the renunciation of war. In the next
year Kellogg joined Briand in the ranks of Nobel Peace Prize
laureates.
The last major proposal Briand offered to the world was his
sweeping concept of a European Union outlined in a memorandum to
twenty-six nations in May, 1930. In September the proposal was
presented to the League of Nations, but when Briand was not
reappointed to the foreign ministry after Premier Laval's
resignation in January, 1932, the proposal languished.
On May 13, 1931, Briand lost his bid for the presidency of
France, but with his vital resiliency and equable temperament, he
did not lose a day at his office in Quai d'Orsay.
Briand occupied the French foreign office longer than any
diplomat since Talleyrand. A moral force in post-World War I
politics, he sought to substitute trust for suspicion, law for
international disorder, mankind's betterment for human
destruction. Yet he tempered his ideals with a Gallic sense of
reality; he would, for example, hedge an idealistic conception
with precautions in case it should fail.
Briand died quite unexpectedly on March 7, 1932; he was buried at
Cocherel, his country retreat.
| Selected Bibliography |
| Aubert, Alfred, Briand. Paris, Chiron, 1928. |
| Baumont, Maurice, Aristide Briand: Diplomat und Idealist, translated by Birgit Franz. Göttingen, Munsterschmidt, 1966. |
| Chamberlain, Sir Austen, Down the Years. London, Cassell, 1935. Chapter 12 is a study of Briand. |
| Daniélou, Charles, Le Vrai Visage d'Aristide Briand. Paris, Figuière, 1935. |
| Elisha, Achille, Aristide Briand: Discours et écrits de politique étrangère. Paris, Plon, 1965. |
| Hermans, Jules, L'Évolution de la pensée européenne d'Aristide Briand. Nancy, Idoux, 1965. Contains a bibliography and the full text of « Projet d'Union Européenne» |
| Jules-Bois, « Briand: Member of Twenty-one French Cabinets», Current History, 31 (1929) 529-535. |
| Kolb, Annette, Versuch über Briand. Berlin, Rowohlt, 1929. |
| Ludwig, Emil, «», Political Quarterly, 3 (1932) 381-397. |
| Pensa, Henri, De Locarno au Pacte Kellogg: La Politique européenne sous le triumvirat Chamberlain-Briand-Stresemann, 1925-1929. Paris, 1930. |
| Sieburg, Friedrich, «», Foreign Affairs, 10 (1932) 572-588. |
| Suarez, Georges, Briand, sa vie, son oeuvre. 6 tomes. Paris, Plon, 1938-1952. |
| Thomson, Valentine, Briand: Man of Peace. New York, Covici-Friede, 1930. |
1. Noted by
Emil Ludwig in «Briand», Political Quarterly, 3
(1932) 393.
2. Jules Verne, A Long
Vacation, translated by Olga Marx (New York: Holt, Rinehart,
and Winston, 1967), p. 28.
3. See Jules-Bois (Selected
Bibliography) for his list of offices held by Briand from 1906 to
1929, with details of dates and names of premiers involved.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1926-1950, 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 1926
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