I was born in
Oslo, March 3, 1895, as son of the gold- and silversmith, Anton Frisch, and his
wife, Ragna Fredrikke Kittilsen, who has had a great impact on my general outlook
and view on life.
I was first married in 1920 to Marie Smedal. We
had an only child, Ragna, who was married Hasnaoui. She has a daughter, Nadia,
who, of course, in the view of her grandfather, is the most superb granddaughter
in the whole world. My first wife died in 1952. In 1953, I married Astrid Johannessen
whom I had known from childhood. She had passed her university degree in languages
in the Oslo University, 1921. She is a daughter of the businessman and shipowner
(from the time of the sailing ships), I.M. Johannessen and his wife, Julie Caspersen.
They had been intimate friends of my parents for many years. Ever since our marriage,
Astrid has been my unfailing companion and has sustained me devotedly in all the
ups and downs of life.
My father's gold- and silverwork firm in Oslo
was established by my grandfather in 1856. Gold and silver has been a tradition
in our family ever since the years around 1630 when King Christian IV of Denmark-Norway
asked the Electoral Prince of Saxony to send him a team of mining specialists
from Freiberg in Saxony (that had a Mining Academy) to the newly-discovered silver
deposits at Kongsberg, Norway. We can trace our ancestry fairly exactly back to
that time.
When I was planning my future it was more or less taken
for granted that I should follow the gold and silver tradition. For that purpose,
I started as an apprentice in the workshop of the famous Oslo firm, David Andersen,
and at the end of the apprenticeship in 1920, I completed my handicraftsman's
probation work as a goldsmith.
After the beginning of my apprenticeship,
my mother got a strong feeling that the trade would not be satisfactory for me
in the long run. She insisted that at the same time as I completed my apprenticeship,
I should take up a university study. We perused the catalogue of the Oslo University
and found that economics was the shortest and easiest study. So,
therefore, economics it became. That is the way it happened. Later on, the study
of economics in the Oslo University has proceeded by leaps and bounds in the direction
of a more advanced and time-consuming study (some people seem to think that, somehow,
I have been instrumental in this development).
I passed my university
degree in economics in Oslo, 1919. About a year later, I went abroad to study
economics and mathematics in earnest. I visited France, Germany, Great Britain,
the United States and Italy. During my stay of nearly three years in France, I
got so familiar with the conditions there that ever since, when I get to visit
France, I somehow feel that I have "come home again". I passed my Ph.D. on a mathematical
statistical subject in the Oslo University in 1926. In 1925 I was appointed Assistant
Professor, in 1928, Associate Professor, and in 1931, full Professor in Oslo.
I became Director of Research of the newly-established Economic Institute in the
Oslo University.
In addition to these facts, I shall not have much
to say about my scientific career. I am an invited member of a great number of
learned societies in different countries, and have several doctorates honoris
causa.
Of my scientific awards before the 1969 Prize in Economic
Science in Memory of Alfred Nobel, I must mention the big Antonio Feltrinelli
prize awarded to me in 1961 by the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, the old and
famous Italian society of which Galileo Galilei was one of the first members.
When I think of the long list of problems of which I have in vain tried
to find the solution, and think of the honours that have nevertheless been bestowed
upon me, I understand with deep thankfulness to Whom all this is due: to the Lord
Who has steered my steps over the years, and Who has been my refuge in the superior
matters which no science can ever reach.
My hobbies have been outdoor
life, including mountain climbing on a modest scale. But above all, it has been
bee-keeping and queen-rearing in which I have been engaged for 57 years, with
emphasis on a genetic and statistical study with a view to improving the quality
of the bee. If somebody asked me if I find this occupation pleasant and entertaining,
I am not sure I could honestly say yes. It is more in the nature of an obsession
which I shall never be able to get rid of.
From Nobel Lectures, Economics 1969-1980, Editor Assar Lindbeck, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1992
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Ragnar Frisch died on January 31, 1973.
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