The Nomination Database for the
Nobel Peace Prize, 1901-1956
| 1 - 10 of 33 | next » |
| Year | Nominator | Nominee(s) | Motivation | |
| 1901 | Kemény | von Suttner | Suttner was the author of the novel "Die Waffen nieder" (Lay Down Your Arms), the most important antiwar novel of the period. She was the founder and president of the Austrian Peace Society (1891), and she contributed to the foundation of the Permanent International Peace Bureau (1891). Suttner was nominated for her contribution to the international peace movement. | Show » |
| 1902 | Kemény | von Suttner | Suttner was the author of the novel "Die Waffen nieder" (Lay Down Your Arms), the most important antiwar novel of the period. She was the founder and president of the Austrian Peace Society (1891), and she contributed to the foundation of the Permanent International Peace Bureau (1891). Suttner was nominated for her contribution to the international peace movement. | Show » |
| 1903 | Kemény | von Suttner | Suttner was the author of the novel "Die Waffen nieder" (Lay Down Your Arms), the most important antiwar novel of the period. She was the founder and president of the Austrian Peace Society (1891), and she contributed to the foundation of the Permanent International Peace Bureau (1891). Suttner was nominated for her contribution to the international peace movement. | Show » |
| 1904 | von Kemény | von Suttner | Suttner was the author of the novel "Die Waffen nieder" (Lay Down Your Arms), the most important antiwar novel of the period. She was the founder and president of the Austrian Peace Society (1891), and she contributed to the foundation of the Permanent International Peace Bureau (1891). Suttner was nominated for her contribution to the international peace movement. | Show » |
| 1905 | von Kemény | von Suttner | Suttner was the author of the novel "Die Waffen nieder" (Lay Down Your Arms), the most important antiwar novel of the period. She was the founder and president of the Austrian Peace Society (1891), and she contributed to the foundation of the Permanent International Peace Bureau (1891). Suttner was nominated for her contribution to the international peace movement. | Show » |
| 1906 | von Kemény | Bajer | Bajer promoted Nordic neutrality and brotherhood. He was one of the initiators and founders of the Permanent International Peace Bureau, and he was the first president of the Peace Bureau. Bajer was also member of the council of the Inter-Parliamentary Union. He organized peace work both in Denmark and internationally, both popular peace movements and parliamentary peace work. Bajer was Scandinavia's most prominent peace advocate. | Show » |
| 1911 | 19 Professors of Law | Apponyi | Apponyi promoted inter-parliamentary peace work and international arbitration. Delegate to all inter-parliamentary peace conferences since 1895 (except Brussels 1897). He initiated a proposal intended to make compulsory the establishment of pressure groups working for peace by the national inter-parliamentary groups. Apponyi had founded such a group in Hungary. | Show » |
| 1911 | Zipernowsky | Fried Moch |
Show » | |
| 1911 | Zipernowsky | Moch Fried |
Show » | |
| 1912 | Zipernowsky | Moch | Show » | |
| 1 - 10 of 33 | next » |
TO CITE THIS PAGE:
MLA style: "Nomination Database - Peace". Nobelprize.org. 22 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/nomination/nomination.php?action=advsearch&key1=nomcity&log1=IS&string1=Budapest&log10=AND&key2=nomcountry&log2=IS&string2=HU
MLA style: "Nomination Database - Peace". Nobelprize.org. 22 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/nomination/nomination.php?action=advsearch&key1=nomcity&log1=IS&string1=Budapest&log10=AND&key2=nomcountry&log2=IS&string2=HU
