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Sir Norman Angell

British economist
Also known as: Ralph Norman Angell-Lane
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Sir Norman Angell, c. 1925.
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Sir Norman Angell, c. 1925.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (LC-DIG-ggbain-25891)
original name:
Ralph Norman Angell-Lane
born:
December 26, 1873, Holbeach, Lincolnshire, England
died:
October 7, 1967, Croydon, Surrey (aged 93)
Awards And Honors:
Nobel Prize (1933)

Sir Norman Angell (born December 26, 1873, Holbeach, Lincolnshire, England—died October 7, 1967, Croydon, Surrey) was an English economist and worker for international peace, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1933.

After an education in France, London, and Geneva, Angell spent several years (1890–98) in the United States, working as a cowboy, a prospector, and finally a journalist for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat and San Francisco Chronicle. Upon his return to Europe, other editorial posts followed, notably editorship of Galignani’s Messenger (1899–1903) and Foreign Affairs (1928–31).

Angell’s most famous work, The Great Illusion (1910), translated into more than a score of languages, tried to establish the fallacy of the idea that conquest and war brought a nation great economic advantage and ensured its living space and access to markets, trade, and raw materials. The Great Illusion, 1933 (1933) explored the economic developments and ideas of the 23 years since publication of the first edition. Angell’s literary output was great, producing sometimes more than one book a year. He also invented the Money Game, a series of card games using paper money to teach the fundamentals of currency and credit.

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