Nobel Peace Prize
For years not listed the was no prize awarded
|
1901 |
Henri Dunant (Switzerland); Frederick Passy (France) |
|
1902 |
Elie Ducommun and Albert Gobat (Switzerland) |
|
1903 |
Sir William R. Cremer (U.K.) |
|
1904 |
Institut de Droit International (Belgium) |
|
1905 |
Bertha von Suttner (Austria) |
|
1906 |
Theodore Roosevelt (U.S.) |
|
1907 |
Ernesto T. Moneta (Italy) and Louis Renault (France) |
|
1908 |
Klas P. Arnoldson (Sweden) and Frederik Bajer (Denmark) |
|
1909 |
Auguste M. F. Beernaert (Belgium) and Baron Paul H. B. B. d'Estournelles de Constant de Rebecque (France) |
|
1910 |
Bureau International Permanent de la Paix (Switzerland) |
|
1911 |
Tobias M. C. Asser (Holland) and Alfred H. Fried (Austria) |
|
1912 |
Elihu Root (U.S.) |
|
1913 |
Henri La Fontaine (Belgium) |
|
1917 |
International Red Cross |
|
1919 |
Woodrow Wilson (U.S.) |
|
1920 |
Léon Bourgeois (France) |
|
1921 |
Karl H. Branting (Sweden) and Christian L. Lange (Norway) |
|
1922 |
Fridtjof Nansen (Norway) |
|
1925 |
Sir Austen Chamberlain (U.K.) and Charles G. Dawes (U.S.) |
|
1926 |
Aristide Briand (France) and Gustav Stresemann (Germany) |
|
1927 |
Ferdinand Buisson (France) and Ludwig Quidde (Germany) |
|
1929 |
Frank B. Kellogg (U.S.) |
|
1930 |
Lars O. J. Söderblom (Sweden) |
|
1931 |
Jane Addams and Nicholas M. Butler (U.S.) |
|
1933 |
Sir Norman Angell (U.K.) |
|
1934 |
Arthur Henderson (U.K.) |
|
1935 |
Karl von Ossietzky (Germany) |
|
1936 |
Carlos de S. Lamas (Argentina) |
|
1937 |
Lord Cecil of Chelwood (U.K.) |
|
1938 |
Office International Nansen pour les Réfugiés (Switzerland) |
|
1944 |
International Red Cross |
|
1945 |
Cordell Hull (U.S.) |
|
1946 |
Emily G. Balch and John R. Mott (U.S.) |
|
1947 |
American Friends Service Committee (U.S.) and British Society of Friends' Service Council (U.K.) |
|
1949 |
Lord John Boyd Orr (Scotland) |
|
1950 |
Ralph J. Bunche (U.S.) |
|
1951 |
Léon Jouhaux (France) |
|
1952 |
Albert Schweitzer (French Equatorial Africa) |
|
1953 |
George C. Marshall (U.S.) |
|
1954 |
Office of U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees |
|
1957 |
Lester B. Pearson (Canada) |
|
1958 |
Rev. Dominique Georges Henri Pire (Belgium) |
|
1959 |
Philip John Noel-Baker (U.K.) |
|
1960 |
Albert John Luthuli (South Africa) |
|
1961 |
Dag Hammarskjöld (Sweden) |
|
1962 |
Linus Pauling (U.S.) |
|
1963 |
Intl. Comm. of Red Cross; League of Red Cross Societies (both Geneva) |
|
1964 |
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (U.S.) |
|
1965 |
UNICEF (United Nations Children's Fund) |
|
1968 |
René Cassin (France) |
|
1969 |
International Labour Organization |
|
1970 |
Norman E. Borlaug (U.S.) |
|
1971 |
Willy Brandt (West Germany) |
|
1973 |
Henry A. Kissinger (U.S.); Le Duc Tho (North Vietnam)* |
|
1974 |
Eisaku Sato (Japan); Sean MacBride (Ireland) |
|
1975 |
Andrei D. Sakharov (U.S.S.R.) |
|
1976 |
Mairead Corrigan and Betty Williams (both Northern Ireland) |
|
1977 |
Amnesty International |
|
1978 |
Menachem Begin (Israel) and Anwar el-Sadat (Egypt) |
|
1979 |
Mother Teresa of Calcutta (India) |
|
1980 |
Adolfo Pérez Esquivel (Argentina) |
|
1981 |
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees |
|
1982 |
Alva Myrdal (Sweden) and Alfonso García Robles (Mexico) |
|
1983 |
Lech Walesa (Poland) |
|
1984 |
Bishop Desmond Tutu (South Africa) |
|
1985 |
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War |
|
1986 |
Elie Wiesel (U.S.) |
|
1987 |
Oscar Arias Sánchez (Costa Rica) |
|
1988 |
U.N. Peacekeeping Forces |
|
1989 |
Dalai Lama (Tibet) |
|
1990 |
Mikhail S. Gorbachev (U.S.S.R.) |
|
1991 |
Daw Aung San Suu Kyi (Burma) |
|
1992 |
Rigoberta Menchú (Guatemala) |
|
1993 |
F. W. de Klerk and Nelson Mandela (both South Africa) |
|
1994 |
Yasir Arafat (Palestine), Shimon Peres, and Yitzhak Rabin (both Israel) |
|
1995 |
Joseph Rotblat and Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs (U.K.) |
|
1996 |
Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo and José Ramos-Horta (East Timor) |
|
1997 |
International Campaign to Ban Landmines and Jody Williams (U.S.) |
|
1998 |
John Hume and David Trimble (Northern Ireland) |
* Le Duc Tho refused prize, charging that peace had not yet really been established in South Vietnam.