Presentation Speech by Jørgen Gunnarsson Løvland, Chairman of the Nobel Committee, on December 10, 1907*
Ernesto Teodoro Moneta was born in Milan in
1833. At the age of fifteen he took part in the war of liberation
against the Austrians, and in 1859 he fought at Garibaldi's side
in both North and South Italy. In 1866 Moneta was an officer in
the war with Austria, but after that campaign he retired from the
army and has since devoted himself to journalism. In his thirties
he became editor-in-chief of the Milan newspaper Il
Secolo, one of the most important newspapers in Italy, and
since 1898 he has published the periodical La Vita
internazionale.
Since 1870 Moneta has belonged to the international peace
movement and is its most important Italian representative. He has
been a member of the Commission of the International Peace Bureau since 1895.
With his prominent position in the Italian press, he has enjoyed
excellent opportunities to promote his views. Special emphasis
must be placed on his work in the press and in peace meetings,
both public and private, for an understanding between France and
Italy - work which dates back as far as the beginning of the
modern-day enmity between these two countries.
In 1887 Moneta founded the Lombard Peace Union, of which he is
now president. He has organized several peace meetings in Italy
and in 1906 presided over the fifteenth International Peace
Congress in Milan.
* On December 10, 1907, at the Norwegian Nobel Institute, Mr. Løvland, also at this time Norway's foreign minister, welcomed the audience and paid tribute to the memory of King Oscar II of Sweden (the last king to reign over the union of Sweden and Norway before its dissolution in 1905) who had died two days before. After a speech on «The Second Peace Conference» by Committee member Francis Hagerup, Mr. Løvland announced the joint winners of the Peace Prize for 1907, Mr. Moneta and Mr. Renault. He followed his announcement with a biographical sketch of each. That of Mr. Moneta is given here as the presentation speech. The translation is based on the Norwegian report in the Oslo Aftenposten of December 10, 1907.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1901-1925, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
Presentation by Jørgen Gunnarsson Løvland, Chairman of the Nobel Committee, on December 10, 1907*
Louis Renault was born in 1843 at Autun
(Saône-et-Loire) and since the age of twenty-five has been
professor of international law, first at Dijon and then in 1873
in Paris, where he has lectured both at the Faculty of Law at the
University and at the Free School of Exact Sciences, which trains
aspiring diplomats and members of the consular service. Since
1890 Renault has also been legal counselor to the French Ministry
of Foreign Affairs.
Although Renault has not been a prolific writer, he is the author
of a number of articles on international law, some published as
monographs, some in periodicals; and in collaboration with a
colleague he has produced a treatise on commercial law which is
very highly regarded. His principal activities have been those of
university lecturer - he may be said to have been the guiding
genius in the teaching of international law in France - of
counselor to the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and finally
of France's representative at a large number of international
meetings, among them: the conferences in Bern and Paris on the
protection of literary and artistic property1; the important series of conferences at
The Hague in 1893, 1894, 1900, and 1904 on agreements about
international civil legal conditions; the conference in Geneva in
1906 for the revision of the 1864 Geneva Convention2; and last, but not least, the two
international Peace Conferences at The Hague in 1899 and
1907.
At all these conferences Louis Renault has played an outstanding
part. As a rule he has been the rapporteur of the meeting
and as such has drafted reports and recommendations;
consequently, he has had a decisive influence upon the agreements
and the form they took. At the Hague Peace Conference in 1899,
Renault was reporter for the commission working on the problem of
applying the provisions of the Geneva Convention to naval
warfare, and for the drafting committee which drew up the Final
Act of the Conference.
Renault's participation in the Peace Conference at The
Hague3 was even more important.
He was spokesman on the following problems:
(1) Opening of hostilities
(2) Application of the Geneva Convention to naval warfare
(3) Obligations and rights of neutral countries in the case of naval warfare
(4) The International Prize Court of Appeal.
The last two, in particular, are of
far-reaching importance, as well as of extremely delicate nature.
Renault was also chairman and spokesman of the drafting committee
of the Conference and, as such, had enormous influence upon the
final wording of the Conventions; by the outstanding part he
played in the debates, probably greater than that of any other
member, he also made his mark on the work of the Conference as a
whole.
The president of the Conference, Mr. Nelidov4, described Renault as its
«principal worker» and on one occasion said that his
dictionary had run out of words of praise with which to describe
Renault's share in the work of the Conference.
Louis Renault is a member of the Institute of International Law
and of the Institut de France.
* Mr. Løvland
delivered this speech on December 10, 1907, at the Norwegian
Nobel Institute, following his announcement of the award of the
Peace Prize for 1907 to Mr. Moneta and Mr. Renault. This
translation is based on the Norwegian report in the Oslo
Aftenposten of December 10, 1907. (For a note on other
details of the occasion, see presentation
speech of Mr. Moneta.)
1. Bern: 1886; Paris: 1896
2. The first Geneva Convention for
the Amelioration of the Condition of Soldiers wounded in Armed
Forces in the Field (signed on August 22, 1864) was revised at
this 1906 conference which was called by the Swiss in response to
a request made at the time of the 1899 Hague Peace
Conference.
3. In 1907
4. Aleksandr Nelidov (1838-1910),
Russian diplomat, president of the 1907 Hague Peace
Conference.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1901-1925, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1907