Office: | Deputy Prime Minister of Liechtenstein |
Termend: | 17 July 1957 |
Termstart: | 3 September 1945 |
Primeminister: | Alexander Frick |
Successor: | Josef Büchel |
Predecessor: | Alois Vogt |
Birth Date: | 31 October 1893 |
Birth Place: | Vaduz, Liechtenstein |
Death Date: | 13 July 1957 (aged 63) |
Death Place: | Vaduz, Liechtenstein |
Party: | Patriotic Union |
Children: | 4 |
Otherparty: | Christian-Social People's Party |
Ferdinand Nigg (pronounced as /de/; 31 October 1893 – 13 July 1957) was a political figure from Liechtenstein who served as the Deputy Prime Minister of Liechtenstein from 1945 to 1957.
Nigg was born on 31 October 1893 in Vaduz as the son of a baker by the same name and his mother Baltissernée Celina as one of six children. He attended state school in the city.[1]
From 1909 to 1911 Nigg worked at the Liechtenstein regional court, then from 1911 in the government chancellery. He became a chancellor in 1916 and then from 1920 head of the government chancellery. Nigg was involved in establishing an independent stamp policy in Liechtenstein, starting in 1919.[2] He was initially aligned with the Progressive Citizens' Party, before becoming a member of the Christian-Social People's Party from 1920, then briefly the Liechtenstein Homeland Service, and finally the Patriotic Union when the two parties merged in 1936.[3] [4] He also headed the Intellectual Property Office and was an assistant district attorney from 1920 to 1945. As chairman of the livestock processing commission, he made a contribution to the eradication of bovine tuberculosis.
After the resignation of Josef Hoop in 1945, Nigg was appointed by Alexander Frick as the Deputy Prime Minister of Liechtenstein.[5] [6] From 1942 he was a librarian and from 1955 secretary of the Historical Association Liechtenstein. He was an honorary member of the Harmoniemusik Vaduz. He held all these positions until his death on 13 July 1957, aged 63 years old.[7] [8]
Nigg married Rosa Burtscher (5 May 1893 – 18 July 1987) on 9 September 1918 and they had four children together: Ernst, who became a priest, his twin sister Hedwig (1920-2002), Berno (1925-2000) and Mathilde (1926-2005). The couple and their children are buried in a family grave at the cemetery of Vaduz.