by Øyvind Tønnesson
Nobelprize.org Peace
Editor, 1998-2000
1 December 1999
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The Norwegian Nobel Institute building in Oslo, bought by the Nobel Foundation in 1903. The building (inset) as it looks today. © The Norwegian Nobel Institute |
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The Norwegian Nobel Institute was
established in 1904, and moved into its present building in
central Oslo, close to the royal palace, in 1905. The building,
which was built in 1867, is a classic mansion house. It was
bought in 1903 from consul Christian Christophersen, a prominent
figure in the booming business life of Kristiania (the name of
the Norwegian capital until 1924) in the 1890s. A private house
consisting of two separate apartments, it had to be totally
renovated inside before the Institute could start using it. By
Norwegian standards in 1905, the Nobel Institute was both
fashionable and expensive; at that time some people criticized
the Nobel Foundation for spending too much money on a building.
However, the same criticism could hardly be maintained 50, 60, or
even 70 years later. Little was done to keep up appearances
before 1985, when the Nobel Foundation initiated a second
renovation of the whole building.
The principal duty of the Nobel Institute is to assist the
Nobel Committee in the task of
selecting the recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize and to organize
the annual Nobel events in Oslo. In order to serve as a center of
knowledge related to peace and international affairs in general,
the Institute has built up what is today a 175,000-volume
library. The literature which is available at the Nobel
Institute Library is chiefly devoted to work for peace,
international relations, law, and economics, and modern political
history.
The library is open to the public and has a nice reading room. Today, the Nobel Institute also has its own research department which organizes research projects related to issues of war and peace. The department is based on a fellowship program for visiting scholars from all over the world. The Nobel Institute arranges meetings, seminars and lectures in addition to holding so-called Nobel Symposia, exchanges of views and information to which it invites distinguished specialists from many countries.
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The Norwegian Nobel Institute library. Photo by Øyvind Tønnesson |