Johan Ludwig Mowinckel Explained

Johan Ludwig Mowinckel
Term Start:3 March 1933
Term End:20 March 1935
Predecessor:Jens Hundseid
Successor:Johan Nygaardsvold
Term Start2:15 February 1928
Term End2:12 May 1931
Monarch2:Haakon VII
Predecessor2:Christopher Hornsrud
Successor2:Peder Kolstad
Term Start3:25 July 1924
Term End3:5 March 1926
Monarch3:Haakon VII
Predecessor3:Abraham Berge
Successor3:Ivar Lykke
Office4:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Term Start4:3 March 1933
Term End4:20 March 1935
Primeminister4:Himself
Predecessor4:Birger Braadland
Successor4:Halvdan Koht
Term Start5:15 February 1928
Term End5:12 May 1931
Primeminister5:Himself
Predecessor5:Edvard Bull, Sr.
Successor5:Birger Braadland
Term Start6:25 July 1924
Term End6:5 March 1926
Primeminister6:Himself
Predecessor6:Christian F. Michelet
Successor6:Ivar Lykke
Term Start7:31 May 1922
Term End7:6 March 1923
Primeminister7:Otto Blehr
Predecessor7:Arnold C. Ræstad
Successor7:Christian F. Michelet
Office8:President of the Storting
Monarch8:Haakon VII
Primeminister8:Gunnar Knudsen
Term Start8:1 January 1916
Term End8:31 December 1918
Alongside8:Ivar P. Tveiten
and Martin Olsen Nalum
Predecessor8:Jørgen Løvland
Søren Tobias Årstad
Gunnar Knudsen
Successor8:Gunnar Knudsen
Ivar Lykke
Anders Buen
Ivar P. Tveiten
Otto B. Halvorsen
Office9:Minister of Trade
Term Start9:22 June 1921
Term End9:20 October 1922
Primeminister9:Otto Blehr
Predecessor9:Gerdt Bruun
Term Start10:1 January 1902
Term End10:31 December 1906
Predecessor10:Christian M. Kahrs
Successor10:Carl V. E. Geelmuyden
Term Start11:1 January 1911
Term End11:31 December 1913
Predecessor11:Carl V. E. Geelmuyden
Successor11:Carl V. E. Geelmuyden
Office12:Member of the Norwegian Parliament
Constituency12:Hordaland
Term Start12:1 January 1906
Term End12:9 April 1940
Office13:Leader of the Liberal Party
Term Start13:1927
Term End13:1940
Predecessor13:Gunnar Knudsen
Birth Date:22 October 1870
Birth Place:Bergen, Hordaland, United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway
Death Place:New York, United States
Nationality:Norwegian
Party:Liberal
Spouse:Augusta Mohr
Children:11
Profession:Ship-owner

Johan Ludwig Mowinckel (22 October 1870 – 30 September 1943) was a Norwegian statesman, shipping magnate and philanthropist. He served as the 16th prime minister of Norway during three separate terms.[1]

Biography

Johan Ludwig Mowinckel was born in Bergen, Norway. His parents were Johan Anton Wilhelm Mohr Mowinckel (1843–1918) and Edvardine Magdalene Margrethe Müller (1851–71). His father was a merchant and a member of one of Bergen's old merchant families.He was educated at University of Oslo, graduating in 1889. After graduation, he traveled abroad to Bremen and London to better learn the business of shipping. In 1893 he returned to Bergen and joined the offices of Christian Michelsen. In 1912, he became the founder and principal in the joint-stock shipping company, A/S J. Ludwig Mowinckels Rederi. He was also involved in founding the Norwegian America Line.[2]

Political career

Mowinckel entered public service in Bergen where he became Chairman of the local branch of the Liberal Party (Bergens Venstreforening) . He was elected to the Bergen City Council in 1899 and subsequently mayor of Bergen 1902-1906 and 1911–1913. In 1906, he became Member of Parliament (Storting) for the Liberal party representing Bergen during 1906-1909 and 1913–1918. He became President of the Storting in 1916. He was voted out of office in the 1918 elections.

During the period between World War I and 1935 he remained active in national politics. In 1921 Mowinckel was re-elected to the Storting. He served as Minister of Trade in 1921-1922 and Foreign Minister in 1922–1923. Mowinckel was Norway's Prime Minister during three periods in office; 1924–1926, 1928-1931 and 1933–1935. These were all periods dominated by economic and fiscal crisis. In 1930 Mowinckel initiated the Oslo Convention on customs cooperation between Norway, Denmark and the Benelux countries, to prevent higher customs walls.[3]

In 1925 he became a member of the Nobel Peace Prize Committee. Mowinckel took the initiative during the Oslo Convention (Oslokonvensjonen) of 1930 to encourage free trade between the nations of the Belgium–Luxembourg Economic Union and Nordic countries, anticipating postwar efforts toward the formation of the European Union. He also took an active interest in the League of Nations, serving on the council and becoming president in 1933. In September 1933, Ukrainian public figures appealed to Johan Ludwig Mowinckel as the Head of the Council of the League of Nations with the request to consider the question of the man-made famine in Ukraine (Milena Rudnytska, Oleksander Shulhyn, Ukrainian Public Committee for Saving Ukraine. Also, Margery Corbett Ashby, the head of International Women's Alliance, appealed to him. He kept his word - he included the issue of the Holodomor to the 76th session of the Council of the League of Nations in spite of the resistance of the representatives of some European countries. The discussion of the causes and circumstances of the famine in Ukraine lasted for several hours, but the resolution was not adopted. The delegations of France and Great Britain were against it. He explained his decision by the fact that the "lives of millions" dead of starvation did not allow him to remain silent. He was personally acquainted with Norwegian traveler and public figure Fridtjof Nansen, who in 1932-1933 organized the aid to the Ukrainian farmers. On 20 October 1933, M. Danko, the correspondent of Lviv newspaper "Dilo," wrote that Mowinckel "will remain in the history of the Ukrainian struggles in Europe." Children from the Ukrainian community of Czech town of Poděbrady (Czechoslovakia) thanked Johan Ludwig Mowinckel for his humanistic position regarding the protection of the starving people in Ukraine. On 16 November 1933, he sent a warm response with the gratitude for the attention. He condemned the menace of Nazi philosophy, and when Germany overran Norway in 1940 he followed the Norwegian Government-in-exile to London.

In 1942, Johan Ludwig Mowinckel came to the United States and was engaged with Nortraship, the state-owned Norwegian shipping company during World War II. He died on 30 September 1943 in New York City.[4] [5] [1] [6]

Legacy

Posthumously, a new library building at the University of Bergen was dedicated to Johan Ludvig Mowinckel and had its official opening ceremony, in the presence of King Olav V, on 13 September 1961.[7] [8] [9]

Movinkel spread awareness about the Holodomor in Soviet Ukraine during the early 30’s. Acknowledged in this editorialized poster below.

Related reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Johan Ludwig Mowinckel. Store norske leksikon. Knut Dørum. 1 April 2018.
  2. Web site: About us . A/S J. Ludwig Mowinckels Rederi . 1 April 2018.
  3. Web site: Johan Ludwig Mowinckel. Allkunne. Harald Kjølås. 1 April 2018.
  4. Web site: Oslokonvensjonen – 1930. Store norske leksikon. 1 April 2018.
  5. Web site: Norwegian Government-in-exile. London Remembers. 1 April 2018.
  6. Web site: Nortraship. Store norske leksikon. Audun Grimstad. 1 April 2018.
  7. Leiv Mjeldheim. Johan Ludvig Mowinckel Norsk Biografisk Leksikon
  8. http://www.nsd.uib.no/polsys/index.cfm?urlname=&lan=&MenuItem=N1_1&ChildItem=&State=collapse&UttakNr=33&person=12080 Johan Lidwig Mowinckel
  9. http://www.regjeringen.no/nb/om_regjeringen/tidligere/oversikt/departementer_embeter/embeter/statsminister-1814-/johan-ludwig-mowinckel.html?id=463366 Johan Ludwig Mowinckel