Alfred Nobel
This page is intended for those who have managed to solve The Nobel Mystery: Searcing for Alfred Nobel's Will at the Nobel Peace Center, and for those who would like to know more about Alfred Nobel and his life.
If you have not visited Villa Nobel or solved the mystery, we recommend you to do so soon. You can read more about our family-activity here. But, if you're as curious as Alfred was, we can't stop you from reading further. You are hereby warned.
WHO WAS ALFRED NOBEL?
As an inventor and man of business, Alfred Nobel was both determined and confident. On the personal level however, he was modest, almost shy. He has been described as a lonely and restless brooder who was often ill, who never wanted or had the opportunity to found a family of his own.

Alfred could be tough and cynical in his business dealings, and was in his own words at the same time both a misanthrope and a "superidealist".
He loved literature, had written poems and a play in his earlier years, and built up a large book collection. Here lay the seeds of his decision to set up a literature prize to be awarded to the author of the best work "of an idealistic tendency".
HIS LAST WILL
Alfred Nobel was very interested in cultural and peace-related issues, and the prizes he established reflect this: ."...to those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind."

On November 27, 1895, in Paris, Alfred Bernhard Nobel signed his will. After his death in December 1896, many people tensely awaited the publication of the contents of the will, since it was widely known that Nobel had left one of the world's largest private fortunes. To the great disappointment of some of his relatives and friends, he declared
THE WOMAN BEHIND THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
Why did Alfred Nobel — a scientist and the inventor of dynamite — create a prize for peace? Rumour has it that he felt guilty about his invention being used in weapons production. But the truth lies elsewhere and is named Bertha von Suttner.
Bertha von Suttner responded to a newspaper advertisement from “a very wealthy, cultured, elderly gentleman, living in Paris, who desires to find a lady also of mature years, familiar with languages, as secretary and manger of his household.” This “elderly gentleman” was Alfred Nobel.
The Nobel Mystery: Searching for Alfred Nobel's Will
We are going back year 1896. The famous Swedish inventor Alfred Nobel is just dead. He has no children, and the big question is: Who will get all of his money?
With our new family experience The Nobel Mystery: Searching for Alfred Nobel's Will, we go back in time and back to Villa Nobel - Alfred's home in San Remo, Italy. A home reflects the people living there, especially a home like Villa Nobel. In Villa Nobel, you will have to work together to find the clues that will help you unlock Alfred's safe and solve the Nobel mystery.
Read more about our new family experience here:
WHY DID ALFRED NOBEL CHOOSE NORWAY FOR THE PEACE PRIZE?
No one knows for sure why Alfred Nobel wanted the Peace Prize in particular to be awarded by a Norwegian committee - or what prompted him to include Norway in the Nobel Prize proceedings at all.
Visit the Norwegian Nobel Institute for an educated guess