Tobias
Michael Carel Asser (April 28, 1838-July 29, 1913) was born
in Amsterdam into a family with a tradition in the field of law,
both his father and his grandfather having been well-established
lawyers and his uncle having served as the Dutch minister of
justice. A brilliant student, young Asser won a competition in
1857 with his thesis On the Economic Conception of Value.
Although this achievement may have confirmed an early decision to
take up a career in the business world, he changed his mind and
went on to study law at the Athenaeum in Amsterdam, taking a
doctor's degree in 1860 at the age of twenty-two. In that same
year, the Dutch government appointed him a member of an
international commission which was to negotiate the abolition of
tolls on the Rhine River.
Asser practiced law for a brief period but devoted his life
mainly to teaching, scholarship, and politics. In 1862 he
accepted a teaching position at the Athenaeum as professor of
private law; in 1876, when the institution became the University of Amsterdam,
he continued as a professor of international and commercial law
while continuing a reduced legal practice.
Early in his scholarly career, Asser turned to the problems of
international law, dedicating himself particularly to the area of
international private law in which he soon acquired a position of
leadership. Believing that legal conflicts between nations could
best be solved by international conferences which would agree on
common solutions to be implemented by each participating nation,
he persuaded the Dutch government to call several conferences of
European powers to work out a codification of international
private law. Attended by representatives of most of the countries
of Europe, the first two of these conferences, held at The Hague
in 1893 and 1894 and over which Asser presided, drew up a treaty,
made effective in May, 1899, establishing a uniform international
procedure for conducting civil trials. Asser also presided over
the conferences of 1900 and 1904, which resulted in several
important treaties governing international family law, including
matters relating to marriage, divorce, legal separation, and
guardianship of minors.
Asser's interest in international law led him, along with the
Belgian Gustave Rolin-Jaequemyns and the Englishman John
Westlake, to found a journal of international law, Revue de
droit international et de législation comparée in
1869. Four years later he was one of those invited by
Rolin-Jaequemyns to take part in the small international
conference at Ghent which founded the Institute of International
Law, an organization which Asser later headed. Active in efforts
to establish an academy of international law, Asser died before
such an academy became a reality at The Hague in 1923.
Asser's contributions to the literature of law were a vital part
of his efforts. Among his more important works are Schets van
het internationaal Privatrecht (1877) and Schets van het
Nederlandsche Handelsrecht (1904).
Asser also participated in the practical politics of
international affairs. He accepted a position as legal adviser to
the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1875; became a
member of the Council of State, the highest administrative body
in the government, in 1893; served as president of the State
Commission for International Law beginning in 1898; acted as his
country's delegate to the Hague Peace Conferences of 1899 and
1907, there urging that the principle of compulsory arbitration
be introduced in the economic area; held a post as minister
without portfolio from 1904 until his death.
Noted as a negotiator, Asser was involved during this period from
1875 to 1913 in virtually every treaty concluded by the Dutch
government. One of his triumphs was the securing of a seat for
Spain and for The Netherlands beside France, England, Germany,
Austria, Italy, Russia, and Turkey on the Suez Canal Commission,
the body that drew up the Suez Canal Convention of 1888
guaranteeing the canal's neutrality. Noted also as an arbiter of
international disputes, he sat as a member of the Permanent Court
of Arbitration that heard the first case to come before that
court - the Pious Fund dispute between the United States and
Mexico (1902).
Asser was an accomplished linguist, handling effectively the
German, French, and English languages, as well as his native
Dutch. For his scholarship and its application to the affairs of
government he was awarded honorary degrees by the Universities of
Edinburgh,
Cambridge,
Bologna, and
Berlin. Housed in the Peace Palace at The Hague, a library of
international law which he gathered with the help of
contributions from twenty countries has been named «The
Asser Collection».
| Selected Bibliography |
| Asser, Tobias M.C., La Convention de La Haye du 14 novembre 1896 relative à la procédure civile. Haarlem, Bohn, 1901. |
| Asser, Tobias M.C., Schets van het Internationaal Privantrecht. Haarlem, Bohn, 1877. |
| Asser, Tobias M.C., Schets van het Nederlandsche Handelsrecht. Haarlem, Bohn, 1904. |
| Asser, Tobias M.C., Studiën op het Gebied van Recht en Staat (1858-1888). Haarlem, Bohn, 1889. |
| Encyclopaedia Judaica. |
| «Der Nobelpreis 1911», in Die Friedens-Warte, 13 (December, 1911) 373-374. |
| «T.M.C. Asser », in American Journal of International Law, 8 (1914) 343-344. |
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1901-1925, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
This autobiography/biography was 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 1911