Gottlieb Ringier Explained

Gottlieb Ringier
Office:4th Chancellor of Switzerland
Term Start:1882
Term End:1909
President:Simeon Bavier
Louis Ruchonnet
Emil Welti
Karl Schenk
Adolf Deucher
Numa Droz
Wilhelm Hertenstein
Bernhard Hammer
Walter Hauser
Emil Frey
Josef Zemp
Adrien Lachenal
Eugene Ruffy
Eduard Müller
Ernst Brenner
Robert Comtesse
Marc-Émile Ruchet
Ludwig Forrer
Predecessor:Johann Ulrich Schiess
Successor:Hans Schatzmann
Birth Date:8 December 1837
Birth Place:Sumiswald, Switzerland
Death Place:Bern, Switzerland
Party:Free Democratic Party of Switzerland (FDP)
Alma Mater:University of Bâle
University of Munich
University of Heidelberg

Karl Albrecht Gottlieb Ringier (8 December 1837 – 7 January 1929) was a Swiss politician, President of the Swiss Council of States (1875) and Federal Chancellor (1882–1909).

Biography

Ringier's father was a reformed pastor who supervised the parish Sumiswald at the time of his birth. In 1843 he was appointed to Huttwil, where Ringier would attend school.

Having spent his youth in Emmental and studied at Aarau, he studied law at the universities of Bâle, Munich, and Heidelberg. He had to terminate his doctoral studies after the death of his father in 1860 following financial difficulties. He opened his law firm in Zofingue, and was elected to the cantonal parliament in 1862, serving from 1862 to 1864, and again from 1875 to 1880. He was appointed cantonal government prosecutor in 1863, a position he held for nine years. He was subsequently elected to the Council of States in 1868, where he was considered a moderate liberal. He was President of the Swiss Council of States in 1875.

In 1872, he entered the law firm of his father-in-law in Zofingue. Later he suffered lung injuries during work as a firefighter that required four years of treatment in Ajaccio, Rigi, and Davos.

In 1881, he was elected on the fourth ballot as Chancellor of the Confederation, replacing Johann Ulrich Schiess. This was the first time since the creation of the Federal Chancellery that several voting rounds were required for the election of the chancellor.

The University of Basel awarded him with an honorary doctorate in 1901. He later served as the president of the Swiss Schiller Foundation (1905-1918)

His cousin Johann Rudolf Ringier served in the National Council.