- Cornelius Bernhard Hanssen
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Cornelius Bernhard Hanssen (25 February 1864 – 16 April 1939) was a Norwegian teacher, shipowner and politician for the Liberal Party.
He was born in Feda as a son of a farmer, and younger brother of politician Anders Kristian Rørvik. He graduated from teacher's seminary in Christianssand in 1883, worked as a teacher from 1883 to 1891, when he bought the newspaper Agder and started as editor-in-chief. He started as a shipowner in 1898. He was a board member of the Norwegian Shipowners' Association and a supervisory council member of Den Norske Amerikalinje. From 1917 to 1936 he was managing director of the hotel Holmenkollen Turisthotel.[1][2]
He served as a member of the Parliament of Norway for the constituency Flekkefjord from 1900 to 1915 and from 1919 to 1921. He was elected three times for the Liberal Party and then twice for the Liberal Left Party. He also served as a deputy representative during the terms 1922–1924 and 1925 to 1927. He was elected as a member of Flekkefjord city council in 1931,[1] and was mayor of Flekkefjord in the years 1933, 1936 and 1937.[3]
He was co-founder of the Norwegian Peace Association in 1895, and became an honorary member. He also co-founded the Nordic Peace Union in 1917 and the Nordic interparliamentary peace group, and served as president of the former. He published and edited Det norske Fredsblad from 1894 to 1899. He sat on the Norwegian Nobel Committee from 1913 to 1939, from 1923 as deputy chairman.[1][2]
References
- ^ a b c "Cornelius Bernhard Hanssen" (in Norwegian). Norwegian Social Science Data Services (NSD). http://www.nsd.uib.no/polsys/index.cfm?urlname=polsys&lan=&MenuItem=N1_1&ChildItem=&State=collapse&UttakNr=33&person=11117. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
- ^ a b Norwegian Nobel Institute. "Hanssen, Cornelius Bernhard". http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/articles/committee/nnclist/bios/horst.html. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
- ^ Ringard, Morten (1942) (in Norwegian). Flekkefjords historie. Flekkefjord: Flekkefjord Municipality. p. 135.
Members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee Chairs Jørgen Løvland (1901–21) · Fredrik Stang (1922–40) · Gunnar Jahn (1941–66) · Bernt Ingvaldsen (1967) · Aase Lionæs (1968–78) · John Sanness (1979–81) · Egil Aarvik (1982–89) · Gidske Anderson (1990) · Francis Sejersted (1991–99) · Gunnar Berge (2000–02) · Ole Danbolt Mjøs (2002–08) · Thorbjørn Jagland (since 2009)Members Løvland (1901–21) · Lund (1901–12) · Bjørnson (1901–06) · Steen (1901–04) · Horst (1901–30) · Carl Berner (1905–18) · Hagerup (1907–20) · Hanssen (1913–39) · Koht (1918–42) · Stang (1921–40) · Konow (1922–24) · Knudsen (1924) · Mowinckel (1925–36) · Thallaug (1931–33) · Lange (1934–39) · Jahn (1938–66) · Braadland (1938–48) · Vassbotn (1938–39) · Hambro (1940–63) · Tranmæl (1940–63) · Lange (1945–48) · Oftedal (1946–47) · Ingebretsen (1946) · Lionæs (1949–78) · Natvig-Pedersen (1964–66) · Langhelle (1964–67) · Lyng (1964–65) · Wikborg (1965–69) · Ingvaldsen (1967–75) · Refsum (1967–72) · Rognlien (1967–73) · Sanness (1970–81) · Hovdhaugen (1973) · Aarvik (1974–89) · Haugeland (1974–84) · Lindebrække (1976–81) · Germeten (1979–84) · Anderson (1982–93) · Sejersted (1982–99) · Nordli (1985–96) · Stålsett (1985–2002) · Sandegren (1990–96) · Kristiansen (1991–94) · Kvanmo (1991–2002) · Rønbeck (1994–) · Berge (1997–2002) · Kostøl (1997) · Ytterhorn (2000–) · Mjøs (2003–08) · Furre (2003–08) · Five (2003–) · Jagland (2009–) · Valle (2009–)Secretaries Christian Lous Lange (1901–09) · Ragnvald Moe (1910–45) · August Schou (1946–73) · Tim Greve (1974–77) · Jakob Sverdrup (1978–89) · Geir Lundestad (1990–)Categories:- 1864 births
- 1939 deaths
- People from Flekkefjord
- Members of the Parliament of Norway
- Mayors of places in Vest-Agder
- Liberal Party (Norway) politicians
- Liberal Left Party of Norway politicians
- Norwegian Nobel Committee
- Norwegian anti-war activists
- Norwegian educators
- Norwegian newspaper editors
- Norwegian businesspeople
- Norwegian businesspeople in shipping
- Norwegian hoteliers
- Norwegian mayor stubs
- Norwegian politician, 19th century birth stubs
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