Lenin Peace Prize Explained

Lenin Peace Prize
Country:Soviet Union
Established:21 December 1949
Status:Discontinued

The International Lenin Peace Prize (Russian: международная Ленинская премия мира, mezhdunarodnaya Leninskaya premiya mira) was a Soviet Union award named in honor of Vladimir Lenin. It was awarded by a panel appointed by the Soviet government, to notable individuals whom the panel indicated had "strengthened peace among comrades". It was founded as the International Stalin Prize for Strengthening Peace Among Peoples, but was renamed the International Lenin Prize for Strengthening Peace Among Peoples (Russian: Международная Ленинская премия «За укрепление мира между народами», Mezhdunarodnaya Leninskaya premiya «Za ukrepleniye mira mezhdu narodami») as a result of de-Stalinization. Unlike the Nobel Prize, the Lenin Peace Prize was usually awarded to several people a year rather than to just one individual. The prize was mainly awarded to prominent Communists and supporters of the Soviet Union who were not Soviet citizens. Notable recipients include W. E. B. Du Bois, Fidel Castro, Lázaro Cárdenas, Salvador Allende, Mikis Theodorakis, Seán MacBride, Angela Davis, Pablo Picasso, Oscar Niemeyer, Faiz Ahmad Faiz, Abdul Sattar Edhi, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, CV Raman and Nelson Mandela.

History

The prize was created as the International Stalin Prize for Strengthening Peace Among Peoples on December 21, 1949, by executive order of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet in honor of Joseph Stalin's seventieth birthday (although this was after his seventy-first).

Following Nikita Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalin in 1956 during the Twentieth Party Congress, the prize was renamed on September 6 as the International Lenin Prize for Strengthening Peace Among Peoples. All previous recipients were asked to return their Stalin Prizes so they could be replaced by the renamed Lenin Prize. By a decision of Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of December 11, 1989, the prize was renamed the International Lenin Peace Prize.[1] Two years later, after the collapse of USSR in 1991, the Russian government, as the successor state to the defunct Soviet Union, ended the award program. The Lenin Peace Prize is regarded as a counterpart to the existing Nobel Peace Prize.

The International Lenin Prize should not be confused with the International Peace Prize, awarded by the World Peace Council. In 1941 the Soviet Union created the Stalin Prize (later renamed the USSR State Prize), which was awarded annually to accomplished Soviet writers, composers, artists and scientists.

Stalin Prize recipients

YearPictureNameOccupationCountryNotes
1950Eugénie Cotton[2] [3]
(1881–1967)
Scientist, President of the Women's International Democratic FederationAwarded 6 April 1951
Heriberto Jara Corona
(1879–1968)
Politician, revolutionary MexicoAwarded 6 April 1951
Hewlett Johnson
(1874–1966)
Church of England priest, Dean of Manchester (1924–1931), Dean of Canterbury (1931–1963) United KingdomAwarded 6 April 1951
Frédéric Joliot-Curie
(1900–1958)
Physicist, Member of the French Academy of Sciences, Professor at the Collège de France, President of the World Peace Council (1950–1958), Nobel laureate in Chemistry (1935)Awarded 6 April 1951
Arthur Moulton
(1873–1962)
United StatesDeclined
Pak Chong-ae
(1907–after 1986)
Workers' Party of North Korea politician, Chairwoman of the Korean Democratic Women's League (1945–1965)Awarded 6 April 1951
Soong Ching-ling
(1893–1981)
Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang politician, Vice President of China (1949–1954; 1959–1975) ChinaAwarded 6 April 1951
1951Jorge Amado[4] [5]
(1912–2001)
Writer, Member of the Brazilian Academy of Letters (1961–2001) BrazilAwarded 20 December 1951
Monica Felton
(1906–1970)
Town planner, feminist, politician United KingdomAwarded 20 December 1951
Guo Moruo[6]
(1892–1978)
Writer, scientist, politician, President of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (1949–1978) ChinaAwarded 20 December 1951
Pietro Nenni
(1891–1980)
Italian Socialist Party politician, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Italy (1946–1947; 1968–1969), Deputy Prime Minister of Italy (1963–1968) ItalyAwarded 20 December 1951
Oyama Ikuo
(1889–1955)
Politician, Member of the House of Councillors of Japan JapanAwarded 20 December 1951
Anna Seghers
(1900–1983)
Writer, Socialist Unity Party politician, founding member of the DDR Academy of ArtsAwarded 20 December 1951
1952Johannes R. Becher[7]
(1891–1958)
Writer, Socialist Unity Party politician, founding member of the DDR Academy of ArtsAwarded 20 December 1952
Elisa Branco
(1912–2001)
Brazilian Communist Party politician, Vice President of the Council of Brazilian Advocates for Peace (1949–1960) BrazilAwarded 20 December 1952
Ilya Ehrenburg
(1891–1967)
Awarded 20 December 1952
James Gareth Endicott
(1898–1993)
United Church of Canada clergyman, founder of Canadian Peace Congress, CanadaAwarded 20 December 1952
Yves Farge
(1899–1953)
Journalist, politicianAwarded 20 December 1952
Halldór Laxness[8]
(1902–1998)
Writer, Nobel laureate in Literature (1955) IcelandAwarded 20 December 1952
Saifuddin Kitchlew
(1888–1963)
Barrister, politician, Vice President of the World Peace Council (1955–1959), President of the All-India Peace Council IndiaAwarded 20 December 1952
Paul Robeson
(1898–1976)
Singer, actor, civil rights movement activist, United StatesAwarded 20 December 1952
1953Andrea Andreen[9]
(1888–1972)
Physician, educator, Chairman of the Swedish Women's Left-Wing Association (1946–1964), Vice President of the Women's International Democratic Federation SwedenAwarded 12 December 1953
John Desmond Bernal
(1901–1971)
Scientist, Professor at Birkbeck College, University of London, Fellow of the Royal Society (1937), President of the World Peace Council (1959–1965) United KingdomAwarded 12 December 1953
Isabelle Blume
(1892–1975)
Belgian Labour Party politician, Member of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives for Brussels (1936–1954), President of the World Peace Council (1965–1969) BelgiumAwarded 12 December 1953
Pierre Cot
(1895–1977)
Radical Party politician, Member of the National Assembly of France for Savoie and Rhône (1928–1940)Awarded 12 December 1953
Howard Fast
(1914–2003)
Writer, 1952 American Labor Party presidential candidate United StatesAwarded 12 December 1953

(1916–1988)
Priest ItalyAwarded 12 December 1953
Leon Kruczkowski
(1900–1962)
Writer, Member of the Sejm (1947–1962) PolandAwarded 12 December 1953
Pablo Neruda
(1904–1973)
Poet, diplomat, Nobel laureate in Literature (1971) ChileAwarded 12 December 1953
Nina Popova
(1908–1994)
Politician, Secretary of the All-Union Central Council of Trade Unions (1945–1957)Awarded 12 December 1953
Sahib Singh Sokhey
(1887–1971)
Biochemist, Member of the Indian Academy of Sciences, Assistant Director General of the World Health Organization (1949–1952) IndiaAwarded 12 December 1953
1954André Bonnard[10] [11]
(1888–1959)
Scholar, writer, Professor at the University of Lausanne SwitzerlandAwarded 18 December 1954
Bertolt Brecht
(1898–1956)
Playwright, poet, theatre director Austria (citizenship)
(residence)
Awarded 18 December 1954
Nicolás Guillén[12]
(1902–1989)
Poet CubaAwarded 18 December 1954
Felix Iversen
(1887–1973)
Mathematician, Professor at the University of Helsinki, Chairman of the Peace Union of Finland FinlandAwarded 18 December 1954
Thakin Kodaw Hmaing
(1876–1964)
PoetAwarded 18 December 1954
Alain Le Léap
(1905–1986)
Trade unionist, General Secretary of the General Confederation of Labour (1948–1957) FranceAwarded 18 December 1954
Prijono
(1907–1969)
Academic, politician, Minister of Culture and Education of Indonesia (1957–1966) IndonesiaAwarded 18 December 1954
Denis Pritt[13]
(1887–1972)
Barrister, Labour Independent Group politician, Member of Parliament of the United Kingdom for Hammersmith North (1935–1950) United KingdomAwarded 18 December 1954
Baldomero Sanín Cano[14]
(1861–1957)
Essayist, linguist, journalist ColombiaAwarded 18 December 1954
1955Muhammad al-Ashmar[15] [16]
(1892–1960)
Rebel commander in Great Syrian Revolt and 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine, Syrian Communist Party politicianAwarded 9 December 1955
Lázaro Cárdenas
(1895–1970)
Mexican Army general, Institutional Revolutionary Party politician, President of Mexico (1934–1940) MexicoAwarded 9 December 1955

(1894–1975)
Priest, Chaplain of Oslo Cathedral (1947–1964) NorwayAwarded 9 December 1955
Seki Akiko
(1899–1973)
Singer JapanAwarded 9 December 1955
Tôn Đức Thắng
(1888–1980)
Communist Party of Vietnam politician, Chairman of the National Assembly of North Vietnam (1955–1960), President of North Vietnam (1969–1976), President of Vietnam (1976–1980)Awarded 9 December 1955
Karl Joseph Wirth
(1879–1956)
Bund der Deutschen politician, Chancellor of the Weimar Republic (1921–1922)Awarded 9 December 1955
Unknown year (before 1953)Martin Andersen Nexø[17]
(1869–1954)
Writer Denmark

Lenin Prize recipients

YearPictureNameOccupationCountryNotes
1957Louis Aragon
(1897–1982)
Poet
Emmanuel d'Astier de La Vigerie
(1900–1969)
Journalist, former French Resistance partisan, Union progressiste politician, Minister of the Interior of the Provisional Government of the French Republic (1943–1944), Member of the National Assembly of France for Ille-et-Vilaine (1945–1958)

(1910–1997)
Jurist, Chairman of the Peace Council of Austria Austria
Danilo Dolci[18]
(1924–1997)
Social activist, educator, sociologist Italy
María Rosa Oliver
(1898–1977)
Writer, essayist Argentina

(1902–1966)
Buddhist monk
Nikolai Tikhonov
(1896–1979)
Writer, Chairman of the Soviet Peace Committee (1949–1979)
1958C. V. Raman
(1888–1970)
Physicist, Professor at the University of Calcutta, Founder and President of the Indian Academy of Sciences (1934–1970) IndiaAwarded on 14 June 1958
Josef Hromádka[19]
(1889–1969)
Evangelical Church of Czech Brethren theologian, founder of the Christian Peace Conference
Artur Lundkvist[20]
(1906–1991)
Writer, literary critic, Member of the Swedish Academy (1968–1991) Sweden
Louis Saillant
(1906–1991)
Trade unionist, General Secretary of the World Federation of Trade Unions (1945–1969)
[21]
(1907–1980)
Jurist, scholar, Professor at the University of Tokyo, Chairman of the Japan Council Against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs (1954–1965) Japan
Arnold Zweig[22]
(1887–1968)
Writer
1959Otto Buchwitz[23] [24]
(1879–1964)
Politician, Member of the Reichstag (1924–1933), Member of the Volkskammer (1946–1964)Awarded 30 April 1959
W. E. B. Du Bois
(1868–1963)
Sociologist, historian, civil rights movement activist, professor at Atlanta University, founder of the NAACP United StatesAwarded 30 April 1959
Nikita Khrushchev
(1894–1971)
Politician, First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (1953–1964)Awarded 30 April 1959
Ivor Montagu
(1904–1984)
Filmmaker, critic United KingdomAwarded 30 April 1959
Kostas Varnalis
(1884–1974)
Poet GreeceAwarded 30 April 1959
1960Laurent Casanova[25] [26]
(1906–1972)
French Communist Party politician, Member of the National Assembly of France for Seine-et-Marne(1945–1958) FranceAwarded 3 May 1960
Cyrus S. Eaton
(1883–1979)
Industrialist, organizer of Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs Canada
United States
Awarded 3 May 1960
[27]
(1904–1990)
Politician, Chairman of the Peace Partisans Organization of Iraq[28] IraqAwarded 3 May 1960
Sukarno
(1901–1970)
Politician, Indonesian National Revolution commander, President of Indonesia (1945–1967) IndonesiaAwarded 3 May 1960
1961Fidel Castro[29] [30]
(1926–2016)
Politician, leader of Cuban Revolution, Prime Minister of Cuba (1959–1976), President of Cuba (1976–2008) CubaAwarded 30 April 1961

(1892–1964)
Politician, Member of the Sejm (1961–1964) PolandAwarded 30 April 1961
Bill Morrow
(1888–1980)
Australian Labor Party (Tasmanian Branch) politician, Member of the Australian Senate (1947–1953) AustraliaAwarded 30 April 1961
Rameshwari Nehru
(1886–1966)
Social worker, founder of the All India Women's Conference IndiaAwarded 30 April 1961
Mihail Sadoveanu
(1880–1961)
Writer RomaniaAwarded 30 April 1961
Antoine Tabet
(1907–1964)
Architect, Chairman of the Lebanese National Peace Council[31] LebanonAwarded 30 April 1961
Ahmed Sékou Touré
(1922–1984)
Democratic Party of Guinea politician, President of Guinea (1958–1984) GuineaAwarded 30 April 1961
1962István Dobi[32]
(1898–1968)
Politician, Prime Minister of Hungary (1948–1952) HungaryAwarded 30 April 1962
Faiz Ahmad Faiz
(1911–1984)
Poet PakistanAwarded 30 April 1962
Kwame Nkrumah[33] [34]
(1909–1972)
Convention People's Party politician, Prime Minister of Ghana (1957–1960), President of Ghana (1960–1966) GhanaAwarded 30 April 1962
Pablo Picasso[35]
(1881–1973)
Painter, sculptor SpainAwarded 30 April 1962
Olga Poblete
(1908–1999)
Teacher, feminist, Professor at the University of Chile, President of the Chilean Movement of Advocates for Peace ChileAwarded 30 April 1962
1963Manolis Glezos[36]
(1922–2020)
Communist Party of Greece politician, Greek Resistance/Greek Civil War guerilla GreeceAwarded 1 May 1963
Modibo Keïta[37]
(1915–1977)
Politician, President of Mali (1960–1968) MaliAwarded 1 May 1963
Oscar Niemeyer[38]
(1907–2012)
Architect, helped design Brasília and Headquarters of the United Nations BrazilAwarded 1 May 1963
Georgi Traykov[39]
(1898–1975)
Bulgarian Agrarian National Union politician, Chairman of the National Assembly of Bulgaria (1964–1971) BulgariaAwarded 1 May 1963
1964Rafael Alberti[40]
(1902–1999)
Poet SpainAwarded 1 May 1964
Aruna Asaf Ali[41]
(1909–1996)
Communist Party of India politician, Indian independence movement activist, Vice President of the Women's International Democratic Federation IndiaPresented 14 August 1965
Ahmed Ben Bella[42]
(1916–2012)
National Liberation Front politician, Algerian War revolutionary, President of Algeria (1963–1965) AlgeriaAwarded 1 May 1964
Herluf Bidstrup
(1912–1988)
Cartoonist, illustrator DenmarkAwarded 1 May 1964
Dolores Ibárruri
(1895–1989)
Politician, General Secretary of the Communist Party of Spain (1942–1960) SpainAwarded 1 May 1964
Ota Kaoru
(1912–1998)
Trade unionist, Chairman of the General Council of Trade Unions of Japan (1955–1966) JapanAwarded 1 May 1964
1965Peter Ayodele Curtis Joseph
(1920–2006)
Politician Nigeria
Jamsrangiin Sambuu
(1895–1972)
Politician, Chairman of the Presidium of the People's Great Khural (1954–1972) Mongolia

(1919–2011)
Politician, General Secretary of the Finnish Peace Committee (1949–1975), General Secretary of the Women's International Democratic Federation (1978–1987), Member of the Parliament of Finland (1970–1979) Finland
1966David Alfaro Siqueiros
(1896–1974)
Painter MexicoAwarded 1 May 1967
Miguel Ángel Asturias[43] [44]
(1899–1974)
Writer, diplomat, Nobel laureate in Literature (1967) Guatemala
Bram Fischer
(1908–1975)
Advocate, anti-apartheid activist, Communist Party of South Africa politician, South AfricaAwarded 1 May 1967
Rockwell Kent
(1882–1971)
Painter, printmaker, adventurer United StatesAwarded 1 May 1967

(1909–1994)
Microbiologist, Professor at Charles University, Member of the National Assembly of Czechoslovakia (1960–1968)Awarded 1 May 1967
Giacomo Manzù[45]
(1908–1991)
Sculptor Italy
Martin Niemöller
(1892–1984)
Lutheran pastor, theologian, founder of Confessing Church, President of the Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau (1949–1961), President of the World Council of Churches (1961–1968)Awarded 1 May 1967
Herbert Warnke[46] [47]
(1902–1975)
Trade unionist, Chairman of the Free German Trade Union Federation (1946–1975)Awarded 1 May 1967
1967Romesh Chandra[48]
(1919–2016)
Communist Party of India politician, President of the World Peace Council (1977–1990) India
Jean Effel
(1908–1982)
Illustrator, journalist France
Joris Ivens
(1898–1989)
Documentary filmmaker Netherlands
Nguyễn Thị Định
(1920–1992)
Liberation Army of South Vietnam general, National Liberation Front politician, Vice President of Vietnam (1987–1992)/ Republic of South Vietnam
Endre Sík
(1891–1978)
Politician, historian, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Hungary (1958–1961) Hungary
Jorge Zalamea Borda
(1905–1969)
Writer, politician Colombia
1968–1969Akira Iwai
(1922–1997)
Trade unionist, General Secretary of the General Council of Trade Unions of Japan JapanAwarded 16 April 1970
Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz
(1894–1980)
Writer PolandAwarded 16 April 1970
Khaled Mohieddin
(1922–2018)
Egyptian Army major, National Progressive Unionist Party politician, Chairman of the Egyptian Peace CouncilAwarded 16 April 1970
Linus Pauling
(1901–1994)
Chemist, educator, Nobel laureate in Chemistry (1954), Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1962) United StatesAwarded 16 April 1970
Shafie Ahmed el Sheikh
(1924–1971)
Trade unionist, politician SudanAwarded 16 April 1970

(1907–1972)
Journalist, writer SwedenAwarded 16 April 1970
1970–1971Hikmat Abu Zayd[49]
(1922/1923–2011)
Arab Socialist Union politician, academic, Minister of Social Affairs of the United Arab Republic (1962–1965)
Eric Burhop[50] [51]
(1911–1980)
Physicist, Professor at University College London, Fellow of the Royal Society (1963) Australia
United Kingdom
Ernst Busch
(1900–1980)
Singer, actor
Tsola Dragoycheva
(1898–1993)
Bulgarian Communist Party politician, Member of the National Assembly of Bulgaria (1946–1990) Bulgaria
Renato Guttuso[52]
(1912–1987)
Painter Italy
Kamal Jumblatt[53]
(1917–1977)
Progressive Socialist Party politician, Member of the Parliament of Lebanon (1947–1977) Lebanon
Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti[54] [55]
(1900–1978)
Teacher, leader of Abeokuta Women's Revolt, women's rights activist Nigeria
Alfredo Varela
(1914–1984)
Writer Argentina
1972James Aldridge[56] [57]
(1918–2015)
Writer Australia
United Kingdom
Awarded 1 May 1973
Salvador Allende
(1908–1973)
Politician, physician, President of Chile (1970–1973) ChileAwarded 1 May 1973
Leonid Brezhnev
(1906–1982)
Politician, General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (1964–1982)Awarded 1 May 1973
Enrique Pastorino
(1918–1995)
Trade unionist, Communist Party of Uruguay politician, President of the World Federation of Trade Unions (1969–1975) UruguayAwarded 1 May 1973
1973–1974Luis Corvalán[58]
(1916–2010)
Politician, General Secretary of the Communist Party of Chile (1958–1990) Chile

(1908–1996)
Priest Belgium
Jeanne Martin Cissé
(1926–2017)
Politician, teacher Guinea
Sam Nujoma
(born 1929)
Politician, anti-apartheid activist, leader of SWAPO during the South African Border War, President of Namibia (1990–2005) (before 1990)
Namibia (after 1990)
1975–1976Hortensia Bussi de Allende[59] [60]
(1913–2009)
Educator, librarian, First Lady of Chile (1970–1973) ChileWidow of Salvador Allende (recipient in 1972)
Awarded May 1977
János Kádár
(1912–1989)
Politician, General Secretary of the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party (1956–1988) HungaryAwarded May 1977
Seán MacBride
(1904–1988)
Clann na Poblachta politician, barrister, International chairman of Amnesty International (1965–1974), Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations, Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1974) Ireland
France
Awarded May 1977
Samora Machel
(1933–1986)
FRELIMO politician, Mozambican War of Independence revolutionary, President of Mozambique (1975–1986) MozambiqueAwarded May 1977
Agostinho Neto
(1922–1979)
MPLA politician, revolutionary, President of Angola (1975–1979) AngolaAwarded May 1977
Pierre Pouyade
(1911–1979)
French Air Force brigadier general, Chairman of the Franco-Soviet Friendship Association FranceAwarded May 1977
Yiannis Ritsos
(1909–1990)
Poet GreeceAwarded May 1977
1977–1978[61] [62]
(1909–1997)
Politician, Chairman of the German Communist Party (1969–1973)Awarded 1 May 1979
Freda Brown
(1919–2009)
Politician, President of the Women's International Democratic Federation (1975–1989) AustraliaAwarded 1 May 1979
Vilma Espín
(1930–2007)
Revolutionary, politician, President of the Federation of Cuban Women (1960–2007) CubaAwarded 1 May 1979
K. P. S. Menon
(1898–1982)
Diplomat, Foreign Secretary of India (1948–1952) IndiaAwarded 1 May 1979
Halina Skibniewska
(1921–2011)
Architect, politician, Deputy Marshal of the Sejm (1971–1985) PolandAwarded 1 May 1979
1979Hervé Bazin[63] [64]
(1911–1996)
Writer FranceAwarded 30 April 1980
Angela Davis
(born 1944)
Communist Party USA/CCDS member, second-wave feminist/anti-Vietnam War/prison abolition activist, academic, Professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz United StatesAwarded 30 April 1980
Urho Kekkonen[65] [66]
(1900–1986)
Politician, lawyer, President of Finland (1956–1982) FinlandAwarded 30 April 1980

(1920–1987)
Poet, composer EgyptAwarded 30 April 1980
Lê Duẩn
(1907–1986)
Politician, General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam (1960–1986)Awarded 30 April 1980
Miguel Otero Silva
(1908–1985)
Writer, journalistAwarded 30 April 1980
1980–1982Mahmoud Darwish[67] [68]
(1941–2008)
PoetAwarded May 1983
John Hanly Morgan
(1918–2018)
Unitarian minister United States
Canada
Awarded May 1983
Líber Seregni
(1916–2004)
Broad Front politician, Uruguayan Army officer UruguayAwarded May 1983
Mikis Theodorakis
(1925–2021)
Composer GreeceAwarded May 1983
1983–1984Charilaos Florakis[69]
(1914–2005)
Politician, General Secretary of the Communist Party of Greece (1972–1989) GreeceAwarded September 1984
Indira Gandhi[70] [71] [72]
(1917–1984)
Politician, Prime Minister of India (1980–1984), (1966–1977) IndiaAwarded posthumously on 1 May 1985
Jean-Marie Legay
(1925–2012)
Academic FranceAwarded 1 May 1985
Nguyễn Hữu Thọ
(1910–1996)
Politician, Chairman of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam (1969–1976), Vice President of Vietnam (1976–1992), Acting President of Vietnam (1980–1981), Chairman of the National Assembly of Vietnam (1981–1987)/ Republic of South VietnamAwarded 1 May 1985

(1904–1995)
Writer, chemist, Chairwoman of the Sweden-Soviet Union Association (1979–1987) SwedenAwarded 1 May 1985
Luis Vidales
(1904–1990)
Poet ColombiaAwarded 1 May 1985

(1908–1985)
Politician, peace activistAwarded 1 May 1985
1985–1986Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann[73] [74]
(1933–2017)
Sandinista National Liberation Front politician, Catholic Church priest, Foreign Minister of Nicaragua (1979–1990), President of the United Nations General Assembly (2008–2009) Nicaragua
Dorothy Hodgkin
(1910–1994)
Chemist, Fellow of the Royal Society (1947), Nobel laureate in Chemistry (1964) United Kingdom
Herbert Mies
(1929–2017)
Politician, Chairman of the German Communist Party (1973–1989)
Julius Nyerere[75]
(1922–1999)
Politician, anti-colonial activist, President of Tanzania (1964–1985)
Petur Tanchev
(1920–1992)
Politician, Member of the National Assembly of Bulgaria (1950–1990) Bulgaria
1988Abdul Sattar Edhi[76]
(1928–2016)
Philanthropist, ascetic Pakistan
1990Nelson Mandela[77] [78]
(1918–2013)
Politician, founder of African National Congress, anti-apartheid activist, President of South Africa (1994–1999), Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1993) South AfricaUnable to accept the prize until 2002 due to his trial and imprisonment in South Africa
1990Martti Ahtisaari
(1937–2023)
Politician, diplomat, President of Finland (1994–2000), Nobel Peace Prize laureate (2008) Finland
1990Valerie Goulding[79]
(1918–2003)
Campaigner, Fianna Fáil politician, Member of the 14th Seanad (1977–1981) Ireland

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ru:ПОСТАНОВЛЕНИЕ ПРЕЗИДИУМА ВС СССР ОТ 11.12.1989 N 905-1 О МЕЖДУНАРОДНОЙ ЛЕНИНСКОЙ ПРЕМИИ МИРА. 2006-10-12. http://pravo.levonevsky.org/baza/soviet/sssr1118.htm. ru.
  2. О присуждении международных Сталинских премий "За укрепление мира между народами" за 1950 год. Pravda. Apr 6, 1951 http://old.russ.ru/ist_sovr/express/1951_14-pr.html
  3. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=336&dat=19510407&id=pC5PAAAAIBAJ&sjid=_k0DAAAAIBAJ&pg=3617,1777267 The Deseret News – Apr 7, 1951
  4. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2206&dat=19511221&id=dtQzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=bekFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5318,11986 The Miami News – Dec 21, 1951
  5. Book: Great Soviet Encyclopedia.. Sovetskaya Enciklopediya. 2nd. vol. 24, p. 366. 1953. Moscow. ru. true.
  6. Book: Yearbook of the Great Soviet Encyclopedia. 1959. Sovetskaya Enciklopediya. Moscow. ru. Great Soviet Encyclopedia.
  7. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1310&dat=19521222&id=-iRWAAAAIBAJ&sjid=xeIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5204,3678878 Eugene Register-Guard – Dec 22, 1952
  8. News: Sontag . Susan . A Report on the Journey . 8 October 2018 . The New York Times . 20 February 2005.
  9. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1955&dat=19531221&id=3w8rAAAAIBAJ&sjid=c5sFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6121,3188247 Reading Eagle – Dec 21, 1953
  10. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=888&dat=19541221&id=2Y4zAAAAIBAJ&sjid=gHoDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3712,12840 St. Petersburg Times – Dec 21, 1954
  11. Book: Great Soviet Encyclopedia.. Sovetskaya Enciklopediya. 3rd. Moscow. ru. In some cases in GSE's 3rd edition the year is that, "in which" the Prize was awarded, in other cases – "for which". Hence, the year "1970" there seems to be the Prize "for 1969" or "for 1968–1969"
  12. Book: Yearbook of the Great Soviet Encyclopedia. 1989. Sovetskaya Enciklopediya. Moscow. ru.
  13. Book: Yearbook of the Great Soviet Encyclopedia. 1958. Sovetskaya Enciklopediya. Moscow. ru.
  14. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1706&dat=19800610&id=r3AjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=W18EAAAAIBAJ&pg=2946,4577666 El Tiempo – Jun 10, 1980
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