Oscar Alin

Oscar Josef Alin (22 December 1846  31 December 1900) was a Swedish historian and politician.

Oscar Alin. From: Emil Hildebrand, Sveriges historia intill tjugonde seklet (1910).

Life

Alin was born in Falun, Sweden.[1] In 1872 he completed his doctorate and became docent of political science, and in 1882 professor skytteanus of Government and Eloquence at Uppsala University. As professor skytteanus he succeeded Vilhelm Erik Svedelius, whom he also followed in the inspectorship of the university's Västmanland-Dalarna Nation. In September 1888 he was elected a member of the first chamber of the Riksdag, where he attached himself to the conservative protectionist party, over which, from the first, he exercised great authority. He retired from the Riksdag in 1899 to become rector magnificus of the university, but died already at the end of the next year. It is as a historian that Alin is most remarkable.[1]

Works

Among his numerous works the following are especially worthy of note:

  • Bidrag till svenska rådets historia under medeltiden (Upsala 1872);
  • Sveriges historia, 1511-1611 (Stockholm, 1878);
  • Bidrag till svenska statskickets historia (Stockholm, 1884–1887);
  • Den svensk-norsk unionen (Stockholm, 1889–1891), the best book on the Norwego-Swedish Union question from the Swedish point of view;
  • Fjerde artiklen af fredstraktaten i Kiel (Stockholm, 1899);
  • Carl Johan och Sveriges yttre politik, 1810-1815 (Stockholm, 1899);
  • Carl XIV Johan och rikets ständer, 1840-1841 (Stockholm, 1893).

He also edited Svenska riksdagsakter, 1521–1554 (Stockholm, 1887), in conjunction with Emil Hildebrand, and Sveriges grundlagar (Stockholm, 1892).[1]

gollark: I did wonder a while ago why, if it was possible to have diseases which were both really lethal and contagious/airborne, humans were alive.
gollark: Can't wait for random people to be able to make custom diseases from the comfort of their home!
gollark: The great thing about bioweapons is that commercial DNA printing is quite cheap, and apparently mostly doesn't even defend against known sequences for e.g. smallpox (not that blacklisting works, really), and I believe there are papers describing how you can conveniently resurrect Spanish flu and such.
gollark: Wow, I am typoey today.
gollark: Yes, uncanny valley.

References

  1.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "Alin, Oscar Josef". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 671.
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