The Estonian Academy of Sciences was founded on 28th of January 1938 as an association of top-level scientists and scholars with commitment and responsibility to advance scientific research and represent Estonian science nationally and internationally. The primary mission of the Academy is to assist in building a knowledge-based Estonia, fostering adaptation of new knowledge for economic growth and improvement of the quality of life in Estonia, enhancing public appreciation of science and scientific methods of thought.
Relying on the intellectual power of its Members, the Academy organises various activities in order to achieve its objectives. The Academy provides independent and highly professional scientific expertise and science-policy advice, promotes excellence in research, communicates and disseminates knowledge, enhances public awareness of science and scientists, encourages research co-operation at national and international levels.
The beginning of academies in Europe
The first academies of sciences were founded in Europe in the 17th century. Their creation was due to the fact that the rulers wanted wise advice. The rulers of the time themselves may not have been interested in science, but they were often accompanied by influential figures who could appreciate knowledge.
In Russia, which had hitherto developed in the wrong direction on the periphery of Western civilization, the academy had to be founded together with a university and a academic gymnasium, because there was practically no education system. This was done with the ukase of Emperor Peter I in 1724. The Imperial St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences included about hundred scientists who were from or closely associated with Estonia, such as Karl Ernst von Baer, Alexander von Bunge, Alexander von Middendorff, Georg Friedrich Parrot, Georg Wilhelm Richmann, Peter Carl Ludwig Schwarz, Friedrich Georg Wilhelm von Struve, Otto Wilhelm von Struve et al.
The beginning of the Estonian Academy of Sciences 1938-1940
The first research societies operating with the University of Tartu were established in Estonia in the 19th century and they laid an important foundation for local science. The ideas of founding the Estonian Academy of Sciences arose at the same time as Estonia's independence. However, this was not achieved because there was a shortage of Estonian scientists at that time, and besides that, there were more important challenges for the young country, such as launching a national university and education system in its own language.
By the second half of the 1930s, the situation in Estonian science and education had changed a lot. The Estonian Academy of Sciences was founded on January 28, 1938, based on the Estonian Academy of Sciences Act issued by decree of the President Konstantin Päts. According to the decree, the autonomous academy was subordinated to the Ministry of Education. The law entered into force after its publication in the Riigi Teataja on February 7, 1938.
The first plenary session of the Academy of Sciences took place on April 20, 1938 in the hall of the Council of the University of Tartu. Karl Schlossmann was elected President of the Academy. The formal opening meeting was held on October 22 with the participation of President Päts in the hall of the Estonian Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Tallinn. After the loss of independence in June 1940, the Estonian Academy of Sciences was liquidated by a law signed on July 17 by Julius Semper, the Minister of Education of the pro-Communist puppet Government.
Soviet Academy of Sciences in Estonia 1946-1991
On June 28, 1945, the Soviet authorities issued a decree "On the Restoration of the Academy of Sciences". On April 5, 1946, Arnold Veimer, Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Estonian SSR, signed a decree on the composition of the Estonian SSR Academy of Sciences. Historian Hans Kruus was appointed the first president of the Estonian SSR Academy of Sciences. On the same day, the Council of Ministers of the Estonian SSR also approved the statutes of the academy. On April 6, 1946, the first meeting of the General Assembly of the Estonian SSR Academy of Sciences took place in the white hall of Toompea Castle.
From 1947 onwards, the academy came under increasing ideological pressure. The promotion of trustworthy peole to the structures of the Academy of Sciences was called for. In the following years, a large number of people who were distrusted by the Soviet authorities were fired from the Academy of Sciences system and repressed. In 1950, Hans Kruus, President of the Academy of Sciences, was dismissed from office and arrested. After Stalin's death in 1953, pressure on the academy eased. From 1956, researchers were once again able to focus more on research. Together with the Khrushchev Thaw, there was an opportunity to establish ties with foreign countries, and from 1956, Estonian researchers again had the opportunity to go on official trips abroad. Working conditions also improved.
In the 1970s and 1980s, the Soviet Union possesed large resources to support various fields. Science also received more financing. At the same time, this period is characterized by the subordination of all fields of activity to the control of the central government. Researchers learned to orient themselves better in these circumstances, and the research funding received by the party's decisions also improved. At the same time, the state authorities preferred to see quantity rather than quality during this period, which in turn made the activities of researchers and research institutions more complex.
After Mikhail Gorbachev came to power, attempts were made to reverse the centralization process and give more decision-making power to the local level. The general management of the sciences of the Estonian SSR were also passed from the Moscow authorities to the Tallinn ones. The activities of the Academy of Sciences hanged dramatically in 1988 and 1989. Estonian society underwent rapid changes and the Academy of Sciences did not lag behind. The 1988 General Assembly decided to amend the Articles of Association. The new statutes were adopted by the General Assembly on 6 April 1989. The Academy declared itself the legal successor of the Estonian Academy of Sciences, founded in 1938, and increased its autonomy from the institutions of the Estonian SSR and the Central Apparatus and the Soviet Academy of Sciences.
In Independent Estonia 1991-…
Estonia's independence in 1991 meant the end of the Soviet system of the Academy of Sciences, because a small country and nation lacked the resources to maintain such an apparatus. Already in 1991, the Estonian Association of Researchers called for the dismantling of the current system and the transformation of the Academy of Sciences into a personal academy. This was to be accompanied by the transfer of research institutes and other institutions of the Academy of Sciences to universities. An evaluation report was ordered from the Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1991, which was completed in 1992 and in principle supported the calls of the Association of Researchers. The Academy of Sciences was criticized for lack of communication and cooperation with universities, low publication and a complex and exaggerated structure.
In 1995, the Academy of Sciences adopted a new statute, which stated that the main activity of the Academy is to provide scientific advice. The 1995 statutes gave a major role in shaping the activities of the Academy to the President elected for five years, who was given the general management of the Academy and representative functions in Estonia and abroad. The day-to-day running of the Academy was to be organized by the Chancellery under the leadership of an elected Secretary-General for five years.
President Jüri Engelbrecht headed the academy with new statutes from 1994-2004. During his time, on 16 April 1997, the Riigikogu passed the Estonian Academy of Sciences Act, which guaranteed the Academy the status of an autonomous person in public law. In addition, the Presidents have achieved the increase of both visibility and role of the Academy in Estonian society under Presidents Engelbrecht, Richard Villems (2004-2014) and Tarmo Soomere (2014-…), and a number of research societies and institutions have been associated with the Academy. In those years, the Academy of Sciences became an important research center, within the framework of which the planning, organization and coordination of the activities of the scientific community are carried out.
The Estonian Academy of Sciences was founded in 1938 on the basis of the Estonian Academy of Sciences Act.
On 13 April 1938, the first 12 members of the Estonian Academy of Sciences were approved by the Minister of State Konstantin Päts on the proposal of the Minister of Education. On 20 April 1938, the first plenary session was held, at which Karl Schlossmann was elected President of the Academy. An overview of the Academy's history.
Name
Elected
Research Field
Date of Birth
Deceased
Julius AAMISEPP
1946*
Root Crop Breeding
01.09.1883
19.01.1950
Agu AARNA
1961
Organic Chemistry
11.10.1915
11.12.1989
Hillar ABEN
1977
Mechanics
03.12.1929
21.01.2024
Albrecht ALTMA
1946*
Physics
23.03.1897
08.05.1969
Nikolai ALUMÄE
1954
Structural Mechanics
12.09.1915
27.03.1992
Richard ANTONS
1951
Economics
11.02.1899
10.05.1966
Paul ARISTE
1954
Linguistics
03.02.1905
02.02.1990
Harald ARMAN
1946*
Architecture
22.05.1910
13.05.1965
Pavel BOGOVSKI
1993
Oncology
10.03.1919
08.03.2006
Nikolai BUZULUKOV
1951
Economics
04.05.1905
15.09.1979
Aleksandr DOBRJANSKI
1951
Chemistry
26.08.1889
31.01.1965
Johan EICHFELD
1946*
Plant Cultivation and Plant Breeding
26.01.1893
20.04.1989
Olaf EISEN
1972
Organic Chemistry
28.04.1920
14.03.1989
Harald HABERMAN
1946*
Zoology
19.12.1904
16.12.1986
Raimund HAGELBERG
1981
Economics
07.02.1927
17.07.2012
Johannes HEIL
1951
Engineering
15.09.1895
24.07.1991
Arnold HUMAL
1951
Mathematics
10.03.1908
13.12.1987
Leo JÜRGENSON
1946*
Structural Mechanics
21.01.1901
07.09.1986
Juhan KAHK
1969
History
01.08.1928
28.06.1998
Gunnar KANGRO
1961
Mathematics
21.11.1913
25.12.1975
Paul KARD
1961
Physics
15.12.1914
03.09.1985
Arnold KASK
1961
Estonian Language
10.08.1902
30.07.1994
Harald KERES
1961
Theoretical Physics
15.11.1912
26.06.2010
Aksel KIPPER
1946*
Astrophysics
05.11.1907
25.09.1984
Oskar KIRRET
1961
Chemistry
27.11.1909
18.12.1991
Aleksandr KIUR-MURATOV
1951
Veterinary Science
20.09.1898
08.03.1968
Feodor KLEMENT
1951
Physics
30.05.1903
28.06.1973
Arnold KOOP
1986
History
16.07.1922
21.04.1988
Alfred KOORT
1946*
Philosophy
29.05.1901
28.09.1956
Ilmar KOPPEL
1993
Natural Sciences (Physical Chemistry)
16.01.1940
09.01.2020
Arvo KRIKMANN
1997
Humanities
21.07.1939
27.02.2017
Lembit KRUMM
1987
Energetics
20.07.1928
13.12.2016
Hans KRUUS
1946*
History
22.10.1891
30.06.1976
Valdek KULBACH
1986
Structural Mechanics
06.04.1927
31.01.2020
Eerik KUMARI
1961
Zoology
07.03.1912
08.01.1984
Grigori KUZMIN
1961
Astronomy
08.04.1917
22.04.1988
Harri KÄÄR
1994
Engineering
01.07.1944
20.04.1997
Arno KÖÖRNA
1972
Economics
02.02.1926
21.12.2017
Rein KÜTTNER
1997
Engineering
25.11.1940
15.11.2024
Ferdinand LAJA
1946*
Veterinary Science
17.04.1889
02.01.1956
Heinrich LAUL
1961
Structural Engineering
05.08.1910
16.04.1991
Ülo LEPIK
1993
Mechanics
11.07.1921
12.02.2022
Georg LIIDJA
1987
Physics
04.08.1933
12.06.2017
Ülo LILLE
1983
Biotechnology
16.09.1931
02.01.2023
Artur LIND
1987
Molecular Biology
06.04.1927
30.11.1989
Endel LIPPMAA
1972
Chemical Physics
15.09.1930
30.07.2015
Juri LOTMAN
1990
Semiotics of Culture
28.02.1922
28.10.1993
Artur LUHA
1946*
Geology
09.07.1892
29.12.1953
ÜLO LUMISTE
1993
Mathematics
30.06.1929
20.11.2017
Tšeslav LUŠTŠIK
1964
Solid state physics
15.02.1928
08.08.2020
Viktor MAAMÄGI
1961
History
12.10.1917
31.05.2005
Ottomar MADDISON
1946*
Engineering
31.03.1879
30.01.1959
Richard MAHL
1954
Chemical Technology
28.08.1898
26.06.1964
Udo MARGNA
1987
Plant Physiology
18.11.1934
17.05.2019
Viktor MASING
1993
Biogeography
11.04.1925
18.03.2001
Enn MELLIKOV
2003
Technology of Materials
01.04.1945
23.07.2018
Uno MERESTE
1994
Humanities and Social Sciences
27.05.1928
06.12.2009
Lennart MERI
2001
Humanities
29.03.1929
14.03.2006
Harri MOORA
1957
Archaeology
02.03.1900
02.05.1968
Hilda MOOSBERG
1951
History
23.11.1903
31.05.1985
Gustav NAAN
1951
Philosophy
17.05.1919
12.01.1994
Jüri NUUT
1946*
Mathematics
10.07.1892
31.05.1952
Ergo NÕMMISTE
2012
Exact Sciences
27.06.1956
11.04.2019
Eve OJA
2010
Mathematics
10.10.1948
27.01.2019
Karl ORVIKU
1946*
Geology
17.07.1903
07.03.1981
Kalju PAAVER
1969
Biology
16.12.1921
18.03.1985
Viktor PALM
1978
Organical Chemistry
17.09.1926
23.01.2010
Aleksander PANKSEJEV
1983
History
20.10.1921
27.11.1989
Andrus PARK
1987
Philosophy
17.12.1949
14.08.1994
Erast PARMASTO
1972
Botany
23.10.1928
24.04.2012
Juhan PEEGEL
1977
Filology
19.05.1919
06.11.2007
Mihkel PILL
1946*
Grain Breeding
07.01.1884
19.06.1951
Aarne PUNG
1954
Cattle Breeding
30.06.1909
14.08.1994
Eduard PÄLL
1961
Estonian Language
15.09.1903
13.06.1989
Hugo RAUDSEPP
1961
Organic Chemistry
17.09.1900
06.01.1976
Anto RAUKAS
1977
Geology
17.02.1935
19.04.2021
Jaan REBANE
1975
Philosophy
13.05.1924
10.11.1993
Karl REBANE
1961
Theoretical Physics
11.04.1926
04.11.2007
Loit REINTAM
1990
Soil Science
12.11.1929
17.01.2010
Juhan ROSS
1993
Biogeophysics
14.08.1925
21.06.2002
Ellu SAAR
2022
Sociology
08.10.1955
02.06.2024
Joosep SAAT
1951
History
30.07.1900
16.01.1977
Oskar SEPRE
1946*
Economics
20.05.1900
23.11.1965
Ilo SIBUL
1957
Physiology
10.02.1908
31.01.1979
Karl SIILIVASK
1977
History
20.01.1927
18.11.2017
Helle SIMM
1977
Hydrobiology and Hydrochemistry
23.01.1920
07.10.1991
Boris TAMM
1972
Cybernetics
23.06.1930
05.02.2002
Vello TARMISTO
1977
Economics
07.01.1918
06.11.1991
Alma TOMINGAS
1946*
Pharmacy
15.09.1900
29.01.1963
Nikolai TOMSON
1946*
Air hygiene of residential buildings
14.02.1898
02.04.1972
Hans-Voldemar TRASS
1975
Botany and Ecology
02.05.1928
14.02.2017
Andrei TŠERNÕŠOV
1951
Fuel Chemistry and Energetics
22.04.1904
22.11.1953
Friedebert TUGLAS
1946*
Literature
02.03.1886
15.04.1971
Peeter TULVISTE
1994
Humanities and Social Sciences
28.10.1945
11.03.2017
Enn TÕUGU
1981
Informatics
20.05.1935
30.03.2020
Juhan VAABEL
1946*
Jurisprudence
26.08.1899
10.04.1971
Voldemar VADI
1946*
Medicine
25.02.1891
05.11.1951
August VAGA
1946*
Botany
15.03.1893
11.12.1960
Gennadi VAINIKKO
1986
Mathematics
31.05.1938
01.11.2024
Artur VASSAR
1961
History
18.11.1911
17.07.1977
Mihkel VEIDERMA
1975
Inorganic Chemistry
27.12.1929
25.10.2018
Arnold VEIMER
1957
Economics
20.06.1903
03.03.1977
Johannes Voldemar VESKI
1946*
Linguistics
27.06.1873
28.03.1968
Aleksander VOLDEK
1969
Electrical Engineering
02.04.1911
27.01.1977
Andres ÖPIK
2013
Engineering
04.05.1947
28.01.2023
Ilmar ÖPIK
1967
Thermophysics
17.06.1917
29.07.2001
*nominated
Name
Nominated
Research Field
Date of Birth
Deceased
Hugo KAHO
1938
Natural Sciences
15.11.1885
17.09.1964
Edgar KANT
1938
Humanities
21.02.1902
16.10.1978
Paul KOGERMAN
1938
Natural Sciences
05.12.1891
27.07.1951
Teodor LIPPMAA
1939*
Natural Sciences
17.11.1892
27.01.1943
Oskar LOORITS
1938
Humanities
09.11.1900
12.12.1961
Julius MARK
1938
Humanities
27.03.1890
02.03.1959
Aleksander PALDROK
1938
Natural Sciences
16.05.1871
01.07.1944
Ludvig PUUSEPP
1938
Natural Sciences
03.12.1875
19.10.1942
Karl SCHLOSSMANN
1938
Natural Sciences
19.02.1885
17. 12.1969
Hendrik SEPP
1938
Humanities
23.03.1888
05.09.1943
Gustav SUITS
1938
Humanities
30.11.1883
23.05.1956
Jüri ULUOTS
1938
Humanities
13.01.1890
09.01.1945
Ernst ÖPIK
1938
Natural Sciences
22.10.1893
10.09.1985
Honorary Members
Konstantin PÄTS
1939*
23.02.1874
18.01.1956
Johan LAIDONER
1940*
12.02.1884
13.03.1953
*elected
Name
Elected
Research Field
Date of Birth
Deceased
Valdar JAANUSSON
1991
Geology
30.06.1923
08.08.1999
Carl-Olof JACOBSON
1995
Zoomorphology
24.04.1929
04.06.2018
Antero JAHKOLA
1998
Energy Research
05.02.1931
10.12.2017
Matti KUUSI
1991
Folcloristics
25.03.1914
16.01.1998
Ilse LEHISTE
2008
Linguistics
31.01.1922
25.12.2010
Indrek MARTINSON
1998
Physics
26.12.1937
14.11.2009
Gérard A. MAUGIN
2002
Mechanics
02.12.1944
22.09.2016
Grigori MINTS
2008
Computer Sciences
07.06.1939
29.05.2014
Endrik NÕGES
1995
Automatic Control
05.04.1927
06.06.2006
Els OKSAAR
1998
Linguistics
01.10.1926
09.12.2015
Jaak PEETRE
2008
Mathematics
29.07.1935
01.04.2019
Johannes PIIPER
1991
Physiology
11.11.1924
02.01.2012
Jānis STRADIŅŠ
1998
Physical Chemistry and History of Science
10.12.1933
29.11.2019
Päiviö TOMMILA
1991
History
4.08.1931
18.11.2022
Endel TULVING
2002
Psychology
26.05.1927
11.09.2023
Ivar UGI
1991
Chemistry
05.09.1930
29.09.2005
Henn-Jüri UIBOPUU
1995
Jurisprudence
11.10.1929
21.10.2012
Richard R. ERNST
2003
Physical Chemistry
14.08.1933
04.06.2021
The residence of the Estonian Academy of Sciences (built during 1865–1868), on the slope of Toompea, is a former city residence of the prominent Ungern Sternberg noble family, is a conspicuous building in Tallinn architecture.
The palace on Toompea was commissioned by Count Ewald Alexander Andreas von Ungern-Sternberg, descending from a highly influential Baltic-German noble family. Architect of the house is Martin Philipp Gropius, from Berlin.