Quick Facts
In full:
Väinö Alfred Tanner
Born:
March 12, 1881, Helsinki, Fin., Russian Empire
Died:
April 19, 1966, Helsinki, Fin. (aged 85)

Väinö Tanner (born March 12, 1881, Helsinki, Fin., Russian Empire—died April 19, 1966, Helsinki, Fin.) was a moderate political leader, statesman, and prime minister who was instrumental in rebuilding the Finnish Social Democratic Party after his country’s civil war of 1918. Thereafter he consistently opposed Soviet demands for concessions and inroads on his country’s independence.

Tanner entered the Finnish Parliament as a member of the Social Democratic Party in 1907. In the 1918 civil war, he opposed the Social Democratic alliance with Communist forces, and, after their defeat, he helped reconstitute his party along democratic parliamentary lines. In addition to serving as prime minister in 1926–27, Tanner served as finance minister several times during the interwar period. At the outbreak of the Winter War of 1939–40, he became foreign minister and supported his government’s hard line against Soviet demands. Holding cabinet posts throughout World War II, he largely consolidated the Finnish working class behind the war effort and suffered imprisonment thereafter on Soviet insistence. Released in 1949, Tanner returned to Parliament as a Social Democratic leader.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Agrarian League

German political organization
Also known as: Bund der Landwirte, Reichslandbund, State Land League
Quick Facts
German:
Bund Der Landwirte
Date:
1893 - 1921

Agrarian League, extraparliamentary organization active under the German empire from 1893. Formed to combat the free-trade policies (initiated in 1892) of Chancellor Leo, Graf (count) von Caprivi, the league worked for farmers’ subsidies, import tariffs, and minimum prices. Caprivi’s successor promised to increase wheat tariffs, but by 1900 the Agrarian League had increased to 250,000 members—50,000 more than its mid-1890s membership. By then it had largely captured the Conservative Party, which in the Reichstag (parliament) represented the economic self-interest of Germany’s landed class. In 1902 another new chancellor restored agricultural tariffs (partly in return for support for legislation in naval expansion) to their 1892 levels, though this was insufficient for the league. In 1921 it became the Reichslandbund, or State Land League.