| The
Nobel Medals and the Medal for the Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences
(By Birgitta Lemmel)
According to the Statutes of the Nobel Foundation, given by the King in Council on June 29, 1900, "the prize-awarding bodies shall present to each prize-winner an assignment for the amount of the prize, a diploma, and a gold medal bearing the image of the testator and an appropriate inscription." The
medals for Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine and Literature were
modeled by the Swedish sculptor and engraver Erik Lindberg and the Peace
medal by the Norwegian sculptor Gustav Vigeland. The medal for the Sveriges
Riksbank (Bank of Sweden) Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred
Nobel (established in 1968 in connection with the 300th anniversary of
the Bank of Sweden), was designed by Gunvor Svensson-Lundqvist.
There
are many rumors of what happened to the Nobel medals of three Nobel Laureates
in Physics during World War II: the medals of the Germans Max von
Laue (1914) and James
Franck (1925), and of the Dane Niels
Bohr (1922). Professor Bohr's Institute of Theoretical Physics in
Copenhagen had been a refuge for German Jewish physists since 1933. Max
von Laue and James Franck had deposited their medals there to keep them
from being confiscated by the German authorities. After the occupation
of Denmark in April 1940, the medals were Bohr's first concern, according
to the Hungarian chemist George
de Hevesy (also of Jewish origin and a 1943 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry),
who worked at the institute. In Hitler's Germany it was almost a capital
offense to send gold out of the country. Since the names of the Laureates
were engraved on the medals, their discovery by the invading forces would
have had very serious consequences. To quote George de Hevesy (Adventures
in Radioisotope Research, Vol. 1, p. 27, Pergamon, New York, 1962), who
talks about von Laue's medal: "I suggested that we should bury the medal,
but Bohr did not like this idea as the medal might be unearthed. I decided
to dissolve it. While the invading forces marched in the streets of Copenhagen,
I was busy dissolving Laue's and also James Franck's medals. After the
war, the gold was recovered and the Nobel Foundation generously presented
Laue and Frank with new Nobel medals." de Hevesy wrote to von Laue after
the war that the task of dissolving the medals had not been easy, as gold
is "exceedingly unreactive and difficult to dissolve." The Nazis occupied
Bohr's institute and searched it very carefully but they did not find
anything. The medals quietly waited out the war in a solution of aqua
regia. de Hevesy did not mention Niels Bohr's own Nobel medal but documents
in the Niels Bohr Archive in Copenhagen show that Niels Bohr's Nobel medal,
as well as the Nobel medal of the 1920 Danish Laureate in Physiology or
Medicine, August Krogh, had already been donated to an auction held on
March 12, 1940 for the benefit of the Fund for Finnish Relief (Finlandshjälpen).
The medals were bought by an anonymous buyer and donated to the Danish
Historical Museum in Fredriksborg, where they are still kept. Regarding
the Nobel medals of von Laue and Franck, the Niels Bohr Archive has a
letter from Niels Bohr dated January 24, 1950, about the delivery of gold
to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm relating to these
two medals. The Nobel medals had been kept in the chemical substance in
such a way that the Royal Mint in Stockholm preferred to strike new medals
instead of trying to get them out of their wrapping. The proceedings of
the Nobel Foundation on February 28, 1952, mention that Professor Franck
received his recoined medal at a ceremony at the University of Chicago
on January 31, 1952. |