Ragnvald Moe
Norwegian historian (1873–1965)
Ragnvald Moe (1873–1965) was a Norwegian historian.
Ragnvald Moe | |
---|---|
Moe c. 1930, photographed by Anders Beer Wilse | |
Born | 1873 Bergen, Norway |
Died | 1965 (aged 91 or 92) |
Biography
Moe was born in Bergen in 1873, and got his cand.philol. degree in 1900. He worked as amanuensis at the University Library of Oslo from 1904 to 1909, then as a secretary of the Norwegian Nobel Committee from 1909, and was director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute from 1928 to 1946. He died in 1965.[1]
References
- ^ Greve, Tim. "Ragnvald Moe". Store Norske Leksikon (in Norwegian). Retrieved 16 October 2009.
- v
- t
- e
Members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee
- Jørgen Løvland (1901–21)
- Fredrik Stang (1922–40)
- Gunnar Jahn (1941–66)
- Bernt Ingvaldsen (1967)
- Aase Lionæs (1968–78)
- John Sanness (1979–81)
- Egil Aarvik (1982–89)
- Gidske Anderson (1990)
- Francis Sejersted (1991–99)
- Gunnar Berge (2000–02)
- Ole Danbolt Mjøs (2002–08)
- Thorbjørn Jagland (2009–15)
- Kaci Kullmann Five (2015–2017)
- Berit Reiss-Andersen (2017–2023)
- Jørgen Watne Frydnes (2024–)
- Løvland (1901–21)
- Lund (1901–12)
- Bjørnson (1901–06)
- Steen (1901–04)
- Horst (1901–30)
- Carl Berner (1905–18)
- Hagerup (1907–20)
- Hanssen (1913–39)
- Koht (1918–42)
- Stang (1921–40)
- Konow (1922–24)
- Knudsen (1924)
- Mowinckel (1925–36)
- Thallaug (1931–33)
- Lange (1934–39)
- Jahn (1938–66)
- Braadland (1938–48)
- Vassbotn (1938–39)
- Hambro (1940–63)
- Tranmæl (1940–63)
- Lange (1945–48)
- Oftedal (1946–47)
- Ingebretsen (1946)
- Lionæs (1949–78)
- Natvig-Pedersen (1964–66)
- Langhelle (1964–67)
- Lyng (1964–65)
- Wikborg (1965–69)
- Ingvaldsen (1967–75)
- Refsum (1967–72)
- Rognlien (1967–73)
- Sanness (1970–81)
- Hovdhaugen (1973)
- Aarvik (1974–89)
- Haugeland (1974–84)
- Lindebrække (1976–81)
- Germeten (1979–84)
- Anderson (1982–93)
- Sejersted (1982–99)
- Nordli (1985–96)
- Stålsett (1985–2002)
- Sandegren (1990–96)
- Kristiansen (1991–94)
- Kvanmo (1991–2002)
- Rønbeck (1994–2011)
- Berge (1997–2002)
- Kostøl (1997)
- Ytterhorn (2000–2017)
- Mjøs (2003–08)
- Furre (2003–08)
- Five (2003–2017)
- Jagland (2009–2020)
- Valle (2009–14)
- Reiss-Andersen (2011–2023)
- Syse (2015–2020)
- Enger (2018–)
- Toje (2018–)
- Clemet (2021–)
- Frydnes (2021–)
- Larsen (2024–)
- Christian Lous Lange (1901–09)
- Ragnvald Moe (1910–45)
- August Schou (1946–73)
- Tim Greve (1974–77)
- Jakob Sverdrup (1978–89)
- Geir Lundestad (1990–2015)
- Olav Njølstad (2015–)
This biographical article about a Norwegian historian is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e