Sneha Girap (Editor)

Antti Hackzell

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
Role
  
Politician

Succeeded by
  
Urho Castren

Name
  
Antti Hackzell

Antti Hackzell httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons66
President
  
Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim

Political party
  
National Coalition Party

Died
  
January 16, 1946, Helsinki, Finland

Antti Verner Hackzell (September 20, 1881 – January 14, 1946) was a Finnish politician from the National Coalition Party and Prime Minister of Finland in 1944.

Contents

Career

Hackzell was the Governor of Viborg Province (1918–1920), the ambassador of Finland to the Soviet Union (1922–1927) and served as the deputy director (1930–1936) and director (1936–1945) of Finnish Employers Association. Hackzell was also the Minister of Foreign Affairs 1932-1936 in the cabinet of Toivo Kivimaki.

In summer 1944 Hackzell was chosen to form a government with the goal of signing a peace treaty with Soviet Union. Hackzell suffered a stroke while on peace treaty negotiations in Moscow on 14 September, and he never recovered completely. His minister of foreign affairs, Carl Enckell, concluded the negotiations.

Family origins

The Hackzell family name derives from the Hacksta family estate, located in Hacksta, Uppland in Sweden. Through Marten Hackzell, the only child of the Uppland clergyman Andreas Hackzelius, and through Marten's offspring, the Hackzell family spread to Norrland and Finland.

References

Antti Hackzell Wikipedia


Similar Topics