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Konstantin Päts

Konstantin Päts[c] (23 February [O.S. 11 February] 1874[1] – 18 January 1956) was an Estonian statesman and the country's president in 1938–1940. Päts was one of the most influential politicians of the independent democratic Republic of Estonia, and during the two decades prior to World War II he also served five times as the country's prime minister. After the 16–17 June 1940 Soviet invasion and occupation of Estonia, President Päts remained formally in office for over a month, until he was forced to resign, imprisoned by the new Stalinist regime, and deported to the USSR, where he died in 1956.

Konstantin Päts
Päts in 1934
(1st) President of Estonia
In office
24 April 1938 – 23 July 1940
Prime MinisterKaarel Eenpalu
as Acting Prime Minister
Kaarel Eenpalu
Jüri Uluots
Johannes Vares[a]
Succeeded byJüri Uluots
as Prime Minister in duties of the President in Exile
Lennart Meri
as President after restoration of independence
Johannes Vares
as Prime Minister in duties of the President (during the Soviet occupation)[b]
Chairman of the
Council of Ministers of the

Provisional Government of Estonia
In office
24 February 1918 – 12 November 1918
Preceded byIndependence declared, position established
Succeeded byhimself
as Prime Minister of the Provisional Government
Prime Minister of the Provisional Government of Estonia
In office
12 November 1918 – 8 May 1919
Preceded byhimself
as Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Provisional Government
Succeeded byOtto August Strandmann
as Prime Minister
2nd, 4th, 11th, 14th and 16th
State Elder of Estonia
In office
25 January 1921 – 21 November 1922
Preceded byAnts Piip
Succeeded byJuhan Kukk
In office
2 August 1923 – 26 March 1924
Preceded byJuhan Kukk
Succeeded byFriedrich Karl Akel
In office
12 February 1931 – 19 February 1932
Preceded byOtto Strandman
Succeeded byJaan Teemant
In office
1 November 1932 – 18 May 1933
Preceded byKarl August Einbund
Succeeded byJaan Tõnisson
In office
21 October 1933 – 24 January 1934
Preceded byJaan Tõnisson
Succeeded byhimself
as Prime Minister in duties of the State Elder
6th Prime Minister of Estonia,
in duties of the State Elder of Estonia
In office
24 January 1934 – 3 September 1937
Preceded byhimself
as State Elder
Succeeded byhimself
as President-Regent
President-Regent of Estonia
In office
3 September 1937 – 9 May 1938
Preceded byhimself
as Prime Minister in duties of the State Elder
Succeeded byhimself
as President
Kaarel Eenpalu
as Prime Minister
Personal details
Born(1874-02-23)23 February 1874
Tahkuranna Parish, Governorate of Livonia, Russian Empire
Died18 January 1956(1956-01-18) (aged 81)
Burashevo, Kalininsky District, Kalinin Oblast, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
NationalityEstonian
Political partyCountry People's Union (1917–1920)
Farmers' Assemblies (1920–1932)
Union of Settlers and Smallholders (1932–1935)
SpouseWilhelmine ("Helma") Ida Emilie Päts
ChildrenLeo
Viktor
Alma materUniversity of Tartu
ProfessionLawyer, journalist, politician
Signature

Päts was one of the first Estonians to become active in politics, and he then started a famous, nearly four decades long, political rivalry with Jaan Tõnisson — first through journalism with his newspaper Teataja, later through politics. Although Päts was sentenced to death (in absentia) during the Russian Revolution of 1905, he was able to flee abroad, first to Switzerland, then to Finland, where he continued his literary work. He returned to Estonia (then part of the Russian Empire), and had to serve a prison sentence in 1910–1911.

After the February Revolution in 1917, Päts headed the provincial government of the newly formed Autonomous Governorate of Estonia, which was forced to go underground after the Bolshevik coup in November 1917. On 19 February 1918, Päts became one of the three members of the Estonian Salvation Committee that issued the Estonian Declaration of Independence on 24 February 1918. He headed the Estonian Provisional Government (1918–1919), although he was also imprisoned by the German occupation regime for several months in 1918. In the provisional government, Päts also served as Minister of Internal Affairs (1918) and Minister of War (1918–1919) that left him in charge of organizing the Estonian military in the War of Independence against the Soviet Russian invasion.

During the 1920s and early 1930s, Päts led one of the more prominent right-wing parties of the time – the conservative Farmers' Assemblies, which eventually merged into another party, the Union of Settlers and Smallholders in 1932. Päts was the Speaker of the Parliament (Riigikogu) (1922–1923)[2] and served five times as State Elder, a post equivalent to that of president in Estonia's radically parliamentarian system (1921–1922, 1923–1924, 1931–1932, 1932–1933, and 1933–1934). During his last term as State Elder, he organized a self-coup to neutralise the right-wing populist Vaps Movement. He was supported by the army and the parliament. During the 1934–1938 "Era of Silence", many reforms were made and the economy grew, while he prolonged[clarification needed] the return of constitutional order. Largely supported by General Johan Laidoner, Commander of the Estonian Defence Forces,[3] Päts ruled as Prime Minister in duties of the State Elder (1934–1937) and President-Regent (1937–1938) until a new constitution was adopted in 1938, after which Päts was elected the first President of Estonia. During his presidency, the Stalinist Soviet Union invaded and occupied Estonia in June 1940. As president, he was forced to sign decrees for over a month, until being arrested and deported to Soviet Russia, where he died in 1956.

Family

 
Päts with his family (from left): brother Nikolai, sister Marianna, father Jakob, brother Voldemar, mother Olga, brother Peeter, and Konstantin Päts (far right).

Päts' parents originated from Holstre near Viljandi in the then Governorate of Livonia. The family name "Päts" means a "loaf" in Estonian and is thought to derive from his patrilineal ancestors from the beginning of the 18th century, who distributed free bread from their mill during a famine. The mill was initially named the Päts Mill; and "Päts" (originally "Paets") was later adopted as an official surname.[4]

The father of Konstantin, Jakob (Jaagup) Päts (1842–1909), was a housebuilder from Heimtali, near Viljandi. Konstantin's mother, Olga Päts (née Tumanova; 1847–1914), was an orphan who had been raised as a native Russian-speaker reportedly by the Razumovsky family, where her adoptive father at one time was the mayor of Valga. It has also been claimed that she grew up with the Krüdener family, where the adoptive father, Baron Krüdener, was her uncle; however, it is more likely that she served the Krüdener family later as a governess. Jakob and Olga met while they were both in the service of the Krüdener family.[4]

Konstantin had an older brother, Nikolai (1871–1940), three younger brothers – Paul (1876–1881), Voldemar (1878–1958), and Peeter (1880–1942) – and a younger sister, Marianne (1888–1947). Since their mother Olga was raised in a wealthy Russian family, their father Jakob converted from Lutheranism to Eastern Orthodox Christianity. The children were all brought up in strong Orthodox traditions.[4]

The family initially lived in Viljandi. Päts' father Jakob was one of the Estonian nationalist farmers, who in 1865 petitioned to Emperor Alexander II of Russia to remove the (what they considered oppressive) aristocratic privileges of Baltic German landowners. After the petition, Jakob came into conflict with the local nobility and in 1873 he was forced to move to Tahkuranna, near Pärnu. As Päts' father was unable to find a job in Tahkuranna, the family moved to a rental apartment in Pärnu in 1882. Three years later, Jakob bought himself some land in Raeküla, near Pärnu, where they initially lived in a roadside tavern, but built a new house after the tavern burned down. Jakob divided his land into smaller lots and built half a dozen new houses on the site, which eventually grew into a borough, and later became a district of Pärnu.[4]

Early life

Konstantin Päts was born on 23 February [O.S. 11 February] 1874 near Tahkuranna. According to locals' memories, he was born in a barn of a roadside farm, since his mother could not reach a doctor in time.[5] He was baptized in the Tahkuranna Orthodox Church.[6] Konstantin started his education in the Orthodox parish school of Tahkuranna.[5] In Pärnu, Konstantin attended the Russian language Orthodox parish school. Later, he attended the Riga Clerical Seminar in 1887–1892, but after deciding not to become a priest, he left for the high school in Pärnu.[7]

From 1894 to 1898, he attended the Faculty of Law of Tartu University, from which he graduated as a cand. jur. After graduation, Päts served in the Russian 96th Infantry Regiment of Omsk in Pskov and was promoted an ensign.[7] After rejecting an academic career in Tartu, he moved to Tallinn in 1900, to start a political career.[8]

Career

Journalism

In Tallinn, Konstantin Päts started his career as an assistant at the advocacy of Jaan Poska, but the job was not satisfactory for Päts. In Tartu, Jaan Tõnisson had already founded his nationalist newspaper Postimees in 1891; Päts was planning to found his own in Tallinn. The first inspiration came from writers Eduard Vilde and A. H. Tammsaare, who could not get a licence from the Ministry of Internal Affairs because of their social democratic views. Instead, they used the help of Päts as an unknown lawyer with an affiliation in the Orthodox Church.[9]

Päts was assumed by the authorities to have had established a newspaper that was loyal to the Empire and would "unite all Orthodox Estonians"; however, in reality his newspaper had a radical political content. The first issue of the Teataja ("The Gazette") came out on 23 October [O.S. 10 October] 1901, starting a rivalry not only between Postimees and Teataja, but also between Jaan Tõnisson and Konstantin Päts personally for the position of leadership in the Estonian nationalist movement. Unlike the more nationalist and radically ideological Postimees, Teataja emphasized the importance of education and commerce for the nationalist cause. The work was made difficult by the strict censorship policies imposed by the Russian Empire's governmental authorities.[9]

Early political career

Päts's first political goal was to take power in the towns, where Baltic Germans still controlled the municipal governments. Päts served as a municipal adviser in Tallinn from 1904;[7] and together with Jaan Poska, he organized an electoral block between Estonians and liberal Russians, which managed to win at the 1904 Tallinn municipal elections. Päts became a member of the city council; and in April 1905, he became the deputy mayor, chairing the city council.[5] His active work at the town government left him little time for his newspaper. A group of revolutionaries, led by Hans Pöögelmann, had taken control in Teataja's staff and published anti-government articles and called people for a revolution.[9]

During the 1905 Revolution, Päts was already an activist on self-government reform, where he supported national autonomy in the Baltic governorates.[10] In the escalation of the revolution, his newspaper was closed and its staff members arrested. Päts found out about this in advance and managed to escape to Switzerland, only to find out that he had been condemned to death in the Russian Empire.[5]

 
Ensign officer Konstantin Päts in 1917

In 1906, he moved to Helsinki, Finland, where he continued his literary and journalist career. Much of his work was published anonymously in Estonia. He also advised local municipalities on land reform questions. In 1908, Päts moved to Ollila, which was located at the Russian border near Saint Petersburg. There he became one of the editors for the Estonian newspaper Peterburi Teataja ("The St Petersburg Gazette"), although he still resided in Finland. In Ollila, he was reunited with his family, with whom he had parted when he escaped to Switzerland in 1905.[5]

After his wife had become seriously ill, Päts found out that he was no longer condemned to death in the Russian Empire. He moved back to Estonia in 1909, to face only minor charges. From February 1910, he served time in Kresty Prison in Saint Petersburg, while his wife died of tuberculosis in Switzerland, where Päts had sent her for treatment. During his imprisonment, he was able to study foreign languages and write articles, to be published in newspapers.[5] Päts was released on 25 March 1911. The governor of the Governorate of Estonia complained about Päts's activity in Estonia in 1905 and pleaded for the government not to let him return.[11] He was banned from living in the Governorates of Estonia and Livonia for six years. However, strong connections with Jaan Poska helped him return to Estonia, where he founded another newspaper, Tallinna Teataja ("The Tallinn Gazette").[5]

From February 1916, Päts served as an officer in Tallinn. In July 1917, he was elected as Chairman of the Supreme Committee of Estonian Soldiers, where he actively worked to form Estonian units in the Imperial Army. During the war, he also organized the cooperation between Estonians and liberal Baltic German estate owners.[5]

1917–1918: Autonomy and German occupation

 
Konstantin Päts was one of the authors of the Estonian Declaration of Independence in February 1918.

In 1917, when German forces were advancing on Estonia, Päts was able to avoid the mobilization. Since the control after the February Revolution was in the hands of the Russian Provisional Government, Estonians were pursuing for an autonomy within the Russian Empire. In local debates on whether to form one or two autonomous governorates in Estonia, Konstantin Päts, who supported a single autonomous governorate, took yet another victory from Jaan Tõnisson, who supported two autonomous governorates. After Estonian mass protests in Petrograd, the provisional government formed the autonomous Governorate of Estonia on 12 April [O.S. 30 March] 1917.[8]

The Estonian Provincial Assembly (Maapäev) was elected; Päts joined and became one of the leading figures of the Estonian Country People's Union, which took 13 of the 55 seats. Left- and right-wing politicians gained an equal number of seats in the Provincial Assembly, which made it difficult to appoint a speaker for the assembly. Jaan Tõnisson of the centre-right nominated the candidacy of Konstantin Päts, who, however, lost by only one vote to the almost unknown Artur Vallner. At first, Päts chose not to join any of the parliamentary groups, but eventually joined the most right-wing Democratic group.[12] Päts replaced Jaan Raamot as chairman of the provincial government on 25 October [O.S. 12 October] 1917.[13] During the October Revolution, Bolsheviks took control in Estonia and the Provincial Assembly was disbanded. After failing to give over official documents, Päts was arrested three times, until he finally went underground.[5]

Since the Bolshevik rule in Estonia was relatively weak, the Council of Elders of the Maapäev declared on 28 November [O.S. 15 November] 1917 that the assembly was the only legally elected and constituted authority in Estonia. Since even the Council of Elders was too big to work underground, the three-membered Estonian Salvation Committee was formed on 19 February 1918; and Konstantin Päts became one of its members.[8]

Soviet Russian forces evacuating, the Salvation Committee wanted to use the interregnum and declare Estonia's independence. On 21 February 1918, a delegation with Päts was sent to Haapsalu, which was chosen to be the site of the initial declaration, but they were forced to head back to Tallinn, since the German forces had captured Haapsalu on the very same day. Attempts to reach Tartu before the German occupation had also failed.[14]

When the Soviet Russian forces had finally evacuated from Tallinn and the German forces were advancing, the Salvation Committee issued the Estonian Declaration of Independence on 24 February 1918 (the declaration had also been delivered to Pärnu, where it was proclaimed on 23 February). Instantly, the Estonian Provisional Government was formed; and Konstantin Päts became the Chairman of the Council of Ministers, the Minister of Internal Affairs, and the Minister of Commerce and Industry.[15] The position of Minister of Commerce and Industry probably remained vacant in reality.[16]

On 25 February 1918, the German forces captured Tallinn. Konstantin Päts was arrested on 16 June 1918. He was sent to several prison camps in Latvia, until he was finally placed in a camp in Grodno, Poland.[17] He was released at the end of the war on 17 November 1918.[18]

After the Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers Jüri Vilms mysteriously died in Finland, Jaan Poska led the underground republic. After Germany surrendered, Konstantin Päts's 2nd cabinet of the provisional government took office on 12 November 1918, making Päts the Prime Minister of the provisional government and the Minister of Internal Affairs.[19]

After Päts arrived in Tallinn and the Maapäev had gathered, Päts's 3rd cabinet of the provisional government was formed on 27 November 1918, with Päts as Prime Minister of the provisional government and also the Minister of War, leaving it up to him to organize national defence. However, due to his multiple portfolios in the government, much of the work in the Ministry of War was delegated to higher officers.[20]

1918–1920: War of Independence

 
Päts gave the first traditional speech at the Independence Day parade on 24 February 1919.
 
Weak representation in the left wing dominated Constituent Assembly left Konstantin Päts with little power in composing the land reform law and the 1920 constitution.

On 28 November 1918, the Soviet Russian Red Army invaded Estonia and conquered the border city of Narva, marking the beginning of the Estonian War of Independence. By January 1919, Estonians had forced the Bolsheviks to retreat; and by 24 February 1919, the entire Estonian territory was under the control of the provisional government. In his speech at the 1919 Independence Day parade, Päts said: "We have to secure our economy so we could become less dependent on our allies. In order to avoid bankruptcy, our new state needs a solid foundation of agriculture."[5]

In April 1919, the Estonian Constituent Assembly was elected, but the Estonian Country People's Union won only 8 of the 120 seats, leaving the majority to centre-left parties. On 9 May 1919, Otto August Strandman took over as the first Prime Minister. In the summer of 1919, Päts opposed the Estonian intervention into the war against the Baltic German Landeswehr in neighboring Latvia, but as he was in opposition and supported only by a small parliamentary minority, the then government decided to start the Landeswehr War, which ended in the Estonian-Latvian victory. After the war with Soviet Russia had also ended with Estonian victory on 2 February 1920, the majority left-wing Constituent Assembly adopted a radical land reform law and the first constitution, which brought about a proportionally representative and very fractured parliament, rapidly changing government cabinets, and a nominal head of state whose office had little more than ceremonial powers only.[21]

1918–1940: Independent Republic of Estonia

In September 1919, Päts formed a new political party, the agrarian-conservative Farmers' Assemblies, which was based on the Country People's Union.[22] In 1920 elections, the party won 21 seats in the 100-member Riigikogu and from 25 January 1921 to 21 November 1922, Konstantin Päts was the State Elder and led the first constitutional government cabinet. It was a centre-right coalition with three centrist parties. The cabinet fell soon after the centre-left Estonian Labour Party left the coalition because of Päts's right-wing policies and criticism of corruption within the Bank of Estonia. After stepping down as head of government, Päts served as President (speaker) of the Riigikogu from 20 November 1922 to 7 June 1923.[23]

In 1923 elections, Farmers' Assemblies took 23 seats. On 2 August 1923, Päts became State Elder for the second time. A similar centre-right coalition with three centrist parties lasted again until the Estonian Labour Party left the coalition, forcing Päts to step down on 26 March 1924. Otto August Strandman had openly criticized Päts for his role in corruption within the Bank of Estonia and economic policies that depended on trade with Russia. Päts kept away from office politics for seven years.[24] Support for his party did not decline. From 15 December 1925 to 9 December 1927, Jaan Teemant of the Farmers' Assemblies was the State Elder.

In 1926 elections, Farmers' Assemblies took again 23 seats and Jaan Teemant continued as State Elder. Already in 1927, Päts criticized members of the Riigikogu, saying that they had been causing the instability of government coalitions, rather than ideological differences.[25] At the 6th Congress of Farmers' Assemblies in 1929, the party was in opposition to August Rei's leftist government and Päts, among others, demanded changes in the constitution, a smaller parliament, a separate presidential office and fight against corruption.[26]

In 1929 elections, Farmers' Assemblies took 24 seats and Päts served his third term as State Elder from 12 February 1931 to 19 February 1932. It was an ideologically wide coalition with the Estonian Socialist Workers' Party and the centre-right Estonian People's Party. On 26 January 1932, Farmers' Assemblies and the left wing-agrarian Settlers' Party merged to form the Union of Settlers and Smallholders, only to be followed by the formation of the National Centre Party by four centrist parties. Päts's cabinet resigned, making Jaan Teemant the new State Elder.[27]

In 1932 elections the newly formed Union of Settlers and Smallholders won 42 seats in Riigikogu and one of the party's leaders, Karl August Einbund, became the State Elder. On 3 October 1932, the coalition between the Union of Settlers and Smallholders and National Centre Party broke up, with the latter wanting to devalue the Estonian kroon during the Great Depression. Päts himself was one of the key opponents of devaluation.[28]

A month-long government crisis started. Since there were only three major parties in the Riigikogu, the third being the Estonian Socialist Workers' Party, no functioning coalition could be found until special authority was given to Konstantin Päts to form a grand coalition between all three major parties. His cabinet took office on 1 November 1932. On 25 November 1932, Päts's government was given more powers by the disunited Riigikogu to deal with the economic crisis. His government was forced to resign on 18 May 1933, after the National Centre Party, still favouring devaluation, left the coalition and the Union of Settlers and Smallholders had lost many of its members to the reactivated Settlers' party.[29] The succeeding Tõnisson's National Centre Party cabinet devalued the Estonian kroon by 35% on 27 June 1933. Although the devaluation proved to be successful and had a good impact to the economy later under his own rule, Päts never recognized his mistake by opposing the devaluation.[28]

Lack of government stability led to several new constitution proposals, but only the third proposal by the right-wing populist Vaps Movement was accepted in a referendum on 14–16 October 1933. Päts was elected on 21 October 1933 to head the non-aligned transitional government to the second constitution. Until 24 January 1934, he served as State Elder, but after the new constitution came into force, he became Prime Minister. The new constitution was a drift from democracy, giving a lot of power to the head of state (still named "State Elder") and leaving the Riigikogu only an advisory role.[30]

Both Päts and Tõnisson, his predecessor as head of state, tried to control the Vaps Movement that was seen by democratic parties as a local National Socialist party that had to be kept away from power.[3] In August 1933, State Elder Jaan Tõnisson had declared a state of emergency and temporary censorship,[31] that was lifted only when Päts's transitional government took office.[32]

The weak government response only gained support for the Vaps Movement and in early January 1934, the movement won municipal elections in several urban municipalities.[33] On 27 February 1934, Päts himself imposed a law, prohibiting members of the military to take part in politics. This action forced several thousand members of the army to secede from the Vaps Movement.[34]

Päts was one of the candidates in the presidential elections that were supposed to be held in April 1934, but the Vaps Movement candidate Andres Larka and even lieutenant general Johan Laidoner were both thought to be more popular candidates than Päts. The campaign was accompanied by threats by the Vaps Movement to take power and rumours of a forthcoming coup. In early March 1934, Päts's political opponent Jaan Tõnisson compared the Vaps Movement with the Nazis in Germany and advised the government to take necessary action against the movement.[33] Konstantin Päts then carried out a self-coup on 12 March 1934.[35] He was supported by general Johan Laidoner and the army.[3]

 
Oru palace in Toila was used as the head of state's summer residence by Päts. The buildings were destroyed in World War II.

A state of emergency was declared and the Vaps Movement was disbanded, with about 400 members arrested, including the presidential candidate Andres Larka. Johan Laidoner was appointed Commander in Chief of the Armies.[36] The period following the coup became known as the Era of Silence and was marked by the collapse of democracy and a gradual transition to authoritarianism.[35]

Speaking in the parliament on 15 March 1934, Päts stated that the Estonian people were "blinded by the propaganda of the Vaps Movement and ill-minded because of it, and the power could therefore not be in the hands of the people".[37] On 15–16 March 1934, the parliament (Riigikogu) approved Päts' actions in hopes of saving Estonian democracy. Päts postponed the presidential elections for the duration of the emergency, expressing concern about "emotions being too high because of anti-government agitation by the Vaps Movement".[36]

In August 1934, Päts appointed Karl August Einbund as Minister of Internal Affairs, making him the third leading figure of the era next to Päts and Laidoner. In September, the Agitation and Propaganda Department was created,[38] in October, all parliamentary work was suspended after the opposition criticized the political restrictions[39] and in December, censorship was introduced.[40]

In February 1935, the Patriotic League (Isamaaliit) was formed to replace political parties,[41] while all other political organizations were suspended in March 1935. Päts stated in his opinions at the time that political organizations should unite the society, not fragment it.[42] The initial state of emergency was declared for six months in March 1934, but after September 1934, Päts extended it for a year in a total of six times.[43][44][45][46][47][48]

Päts believed that a nation should be organized not by political views into parties, but by vocation into respective chambers, and a series of state corporative institutions were thus introduced, following in big part the example of contemporary corporatism in Fascist Italy. Päts had promoted the idea of corporate chambers already in 1918, but the idea did not gain support from strong left-wing parties at the time. Päts was the main proponent of the formation of the chambers and the first two were founded while his government cabinets were in office in 1924 and 1931. Fifteen more chambers were established between 1934 and 1936, bringing the total number to 17.[49]

On 7 December 1935, a coup d'état attempt (the "Estonia plot", named after the Estonia Theatre) by the Vaps Movement was exposed. More than 750 people were arrested throughout the state, crushing the movement conclusively.[50] Leaders of the movement were soon given court sentences as hard as 20 years of forced labour,[51] however they were all pardoned two years later, in December 1937.[52]

Meanwhile, Jaan Tõnisson had criticized Päts's inability to bring the new constitution into effect. In July 1935, Tõnisson was ousted from the Postimees board.[53] In October 1936, four former State Elders, Juhan Kukk, Ants Piip, Jaan Teemant and Jaan Tõnisson, sent a joint letter to Päts, demanding civil freedoms and restoration of democratic regime.[54] Reluctance to restore democracy also caused student riots in Tartu in the autumn of 1936, which led to clashes with the police and disbandment of the student council of the University of Tartu.[55]

The lack of organized opposition during the emergency made it easier for Päts to pass reforms. Päts ruled mostly through presidential decrees, because the Riigikogu was needed to pass real laws. The economy grew and the infrastructure, industry, and education were developed. The Estonianization of personal names was supported, the most prominent example being Minister of Internal Affairs Karl August Einbund, who changed his name to Kaarel Eenpalu.[56]

Päts also signed a decree to bring the Supreme Court from Tartu to Tallinn in 1935, although all but one of the justices voted against it. After the coup, the Supreme Court lost many of its powers and was not able to observe the implementation of democratic principles in the country.[57] Päts also founded the Tallinn Technical Institute on 15 September 1936 as the second university in Estonia. Losing the Supreme Court and some faculties in the university definitely reduced the importance of Tartu in Southern Estonia - the town that had historically been supportive to Päts's opponent Jaan Tõnisson.[58]

 
Man with Decorations. Portrait of Päts by Andrus Johani (1936)

Regarding the 1934 constitution as too authoritarian, Päts organised the passing of a new constitution through a referendum and a constituent assembly. The corporate chambers were to be the basis of forming the assembly.[59] Its formation was approved (with 76% in favour) in a referendum in 1936. The 1936 National Assembly elections were boycotted by the opposition in most electoral districts.[60]

 
Päts giving a speech on the 20th anniversary of the Republic of Estonia at the Freedom Square, Tallinn (1938).

On 28 July 1937, the assembly adopted the third constitution, that was based on Päts's draft.[61] A bicameral parliament was to be elected and the president was to be elected by the parliament, not by the people. On 3 September 1937, a 120-day period of transition began, during which Päts ruled as President-Regent.[46]

On 1 January 1938, the new constitution came into force and the 1938 parliamentary elections were held. Opposition candidates were allowed to take part, however they were given little or no attention in the media. Päts's supporters in the National Front for the Implementation of the Constitution won 64 of the 80 seats in the lower chamber, the Riigivolikogu. The president, who was yet to be elected, was also able to directly appoint into office 10 of the 40 members of the higher chamber, Riiginõukogu.[62]

On 23 April 1938, Konstantin Päts was elected and nominated a presidential candidate by both chambers of the parliament (Riigikogu) as well as by the Assembly of Municipal Representatives. Jaan Tõnisson was the only opposition candidate in the parliament's lower chamber (Riigivolikogu). Of its 80 members, 65 voted for Päts and 14 for Tõnisson. There were no opposition candidates, and no elections necessary, in the upper chamber (Riiginõukogu) and in the Assembly of Municipal Representatives, where Päts received 36 from a total of 40 and 113 from a total of 120 votes, respectively.[63] As both chambers of parliament and the Assembly of Municipal Representatives had elected and nominated the same candidate, in accordance with the constitution, a collective electoral body convened on 24 April 1938 and voted with 219 in favor of the candidate, Päts, and 19 ballots left empty. From a total of 240, the 219 votes were more than the required 3/5 majority (144 votes).[63] Päts gave the presidential oath of office in front of the parliament (Riigikogu) on the same day, 24 April 1938, thus becoming the first President of Estonia.[64]

On 9 May 1938, Päts appointed Kaarel Eenpalu as Prime Minister. On 5 May 1938, all political prisoners, mostly communists and members of the Vaps Movement, were given amnesty. There is no consensus, whether the so-called "Era of Silence" ended in 1938 with the adoption of the new constitution, or in 1940 with the Soviet occupation. The era of 1934–1940 is generally also called the "Päts Era".[65] Also in 1938 a general amnesty was granted for those political prisoners of the Vaps Movement and the Communist Party, who had not directly killed anyone.

1939–1940: World War II, Soviet invasion of Estonia

 
Estonia's leaders before the Soviet occupation, celebrating the country's Independence Day for the last time, on 24 February 1940. From left General Johan Laidoner, President Konstantin Päts and Prime Minister Jüri Uluots.
 
Destruction of Konstantin Päts' statue in Tahkuranna after the Soviet invasion in 1940.

After the beginning of World War II Estonia declared its neutrality, but was compelled to sign the Soviet–Estonian Mutual Assistance Treaty on 28 September 1939 to allow Soviet military bases and 25,000 troops in Estonia. On 12 October 1939, Päts appointed Jüri Uluots as a new, moderate Prime Minister.[66]

In May 1940, Päts believed that the best option for Estonia would be to follow the Soviet leadership's (Stalin's) guidelines until the German-Soviet war. In case of such war, "Estonia would be saved".[67] However, on 16 June 1940, the Soviet Union delivered an ultimatum to the Estonian government. The Estonian government was forced to accept the ultimatum and a full Soviet invasion and occupation of the entire territory of Estonia followed on 17 June 1940.[68]

The Soviet invaders allowed Päts to stay in office, but he was forced already on 21 June 1940 to appoint a new pro-Soviet puppet government with Johannes Vares as prime minister. Päts became effectively a puppet himself, and over the following month he signed nearly 200 decrees issued by the new Stalinist regime.[69] Amongst others, he signed a decree to change the electoral law, allowing the new regime to organize snap elections. This decree to change the law was unconstitutional, since the upper house of the Estonian parliament (Riigikogu) had been dissolved and never reconvened. The new Soviet-styled sham elections were held only for the lower chamber (Riigivolikogu), with voters being presented with a single list of Communists and fellow travellers. On Victory Day of 23 June 1940, Päts declared: "the greatest thing we have accomplished is the creation of the Estonian state. To her we have given our strongest love, our loyalty, our work, and our life." From 29 June 1940, Päts remained under permanent house arrest.[70] Even in early July, Päts reportedly informed the German ambassador that he did not believe Estonia would be Sovietized.[71] On 21 July 1940, the new pro-Stalinist "parliament" proclaimed Estonia a "Soviet Socialist Republic" and it is claimed that only then did Päts realize the essence of the Soviet occupation.[72]

Deportation to Soviet Russia and imprisonment

On 21 July 1940, Päts sent his son Viktor to visit the United States' embassy in Tallinn, and to appeal for protection and asylum in the United States for himself and his family.[73] The Acting US Secretary of State, Sumner Welles gave permission for issuing diplomatic visas to the entire Päts family already on the next day.[74] Many Soviet-era sources claim that Päts had resigned from office on 21 July 1940.[clarification needed] According to some other sources, he signed the resignation document on 22 July and the resignation was approved on 23 July 1940, making Päts formally the president of the new Estonian "Soviet Socialist Republic" for two days.[72] Regardless of the exact chronology, the then pro-Soviet prime minister Vares, took over the president's powers as "Prime Minister in duties of the President" as a mere formality and for only a few weeks.

Either the American visas came too late or the Päts family remained under house arrest, but on 30 July 1940, together with his son Viktor and Viktor's wife Helgi-Alice and sons Matti and Henn, Konstantin Päts was deported to Ufa, Russia, where they arrived on 9 August. There they lived under surveillance in a large apartment for a year. In Ufa, Päts wrote his memoirs of his time in office and pleaded that his grandsons, their mother, and nanny would be sent to either Switzerland or Italy, since his grandson Henn was already in a bad health. After receiving no answer, he pleaded for them to be sent back to Estonia. In his naivety, he pleaded to be exchanged with Ernst Thälmann, former leader of the Communist Party of Germany, who was imprisoned in Germany.[clarification needed] After that, Päts remained quiet, while his son Viktor was certain that Nazi Germany would invade the Soviet Union and that he would soon be living abroad.[75]

The family "randomly" met an Estonian couple, both NKVD agents, in an Ufa market on 29 May 1941. They received an invitation to the family's home the next day. After the visit, it was claimed that both Konstantin and Viktor demonstrated particular viciousness against Joseph Stalin and Vyacheslav Molotov, sympathized with Germany, and announced that they were impatiently waiting for a German assault on the Soviet Union.[75]

 
Konstantin Päts as a Soviet prisoner.

On 26 June 1941, they were arrested and imprisoned in Ufa, the children were sent to an orphanage. Päts was interrogated for hours, but did not take the blame. Even in March 1942, he believed that the Western powers would pressure the Soviet Union to send him abroad. Eventually, Päts and his son were sent to Butyrka prison in Moscow and Helgi-Alice to Gulag prison camps in Siberia. In Butyrka prison, Johan Laidoner was prisoner No. 11, Konstantin Päts No. 12 and Viktor No. 13.[76][77]

On 24 March 1943, Päts was sent to forced treatment in psychoneurotic hospitals first in Kazan, then in Chistopol in Tatar ASSR. His forced psychiatric hospitalization was justified by his "persistent claiming of being the President of Estonia".[citation needed] On 29 April 1952, Päts was found guilty according to § 58-14 and § 58-10 of the Penal Code, which meant counter-revolutionary sabotage and anti-Soviet and counter-revolutionary propaganda and agitation. Forced treatment was ended in 1954 and Päts was sent to a psychoneurology hospital in Jämejala, Estonia. Recognition by the locals and too much attention resulted in him being sent to Burashevo psychiatric hospital in Kalinin Oblast (now Tver Oblast), where he eventually died on 18 January 1956.[78]

Commercial and social activities

Between 1919 and 1933, Päts was chairman of the insurance company "Estonian Lloyd". From 1925 to 1929, Päts was chairman of the council of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry and continued as its honorary councillor from 1935. He also served as the chairman of the board of the Harju Bank and chairman of the Tallinn Exchange Committee.[7]

Päts was among the founders of Estonian Sports Association Kalev in 1901 and also its first deputy chairman.[79] Päts was the chairman of Estonian-Finnish-Hungarian Association from 1925 to 1936 and continued as honorary chairman from 1936. From 1927 to 1937, he was the chairman of the "Fenno-Ugria" foundation.[7]

Päts received honorary doctorates from Tartu University in 1928, Tallinn Technical University and Andhra University (in India) in 1938, along with honorary membership of the Learned Estonian Society in 1938 and the Estonian Academy of Sciences in 1939. In 1938, he became honorary member of the Estonian Naturalists' Society and the Estonian Institute of Natural Resources. He was also named honorary alumnus of the student corps Fraternitas Estica and honorary citizen of the cities of Tallinn, Narva, Pärnu, and Tartu, as well as of his native Tahkuranna Parish.[7]

Foreign relations

 
President of Finland Pehr Evind Svinhufvud and Konstantin Päts in Narva in 1936.

In 1918, Päts made an informal proposal for an Estonian-Finnish personal union. The contemporary leaders of independent Finland were not sufficiently interested in the union and the idea was effectively ignored and forgotten.[80] Päts still bore the idea in his mind, as testified by his so-called "political testament", written in July 1940. In 1922, during his first term as State Elder, he made the first Estonian official state visit, to Finland. He also made unofficial visits to Finland in 1931,[81] 1935[44] and 1937. President of Finland, Pehr Evind Svinhufvud visited Päts in Estonia twice, in 1934[82] and in 1936.[83]

 
President Konstantin Päts visiting Polish president, Ignacy Mościcki, in 1935.

In 1933, Päts also made a state visit to Latvia[84] and the treaty of Baltic Entente between Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania was signed in 1934. This agreement apparently was also another unsuccessful attempt to draw Finland closer to Estonia. During the 1930s, Estonian and Polish officials made several state visits to both countries.[43]

In late 1930s, as the Stalinist Soviet Union took a more aggressive interest in the Baltic countries, Estonia attempted to move closer to Germany in its foreign policy. This change was marked by the 1936 appointment of Friedrich Akel (former foreign minister) as the Estonian ambassador to Germany[85] On 3 December 1938, the Estonian government officially declared the country's neutrality in the event of any military conflicts in Europe.[86]

Criticism

Several aspects of Päts's career are still under critical public debate and various theories have been created, although many of them have also seen broad criticism.[87] For example Päts economic activities and business contacts with Soviet Russia have drawn significant criticism. In 1920–1922 Estonia had more extensive relations with Soviet Russia than with other European countries. The Russian embassy in Tallinn was at the center of Russian gold sales to the West, which constituted about 4% of global gold sales in that period. Estonia and the Bank of Estonia received about 2/3 of the at least 30 million gold rubles transaction fees. The transactions were kept secret and mostly only the Director of the Bank of Estonia in 1920–1921 and Minister of Finance in 1921–1922, Georg Westel, and the State Elder in 1921–1922, Konstantin Päts, knew of these transactions.[88]

Even more, it was the Harju Bank that belonged among others to Päts and Westel that transacted many of the gold sales. Päts, Westel and other big businessmen, mostly members of Päts's Farmers' Unions party, have thus been accused of using this transaction money for their own good.[88] It has also been claimed that the Bank of Estonia gave out several loans to enterprises that were related to Päts's activities and almost all other loans were given to enterprises related to the members of the bank's own council and other top-level politicians. Having big loans was also the reason why Päts, Westel and other top-level politicians did not fight the hyperinflation at the time.[88]

The gold exchange and big loans also boosted money circulation in Estonia, which created an illusion for the wider public that the economy of Estonia and the Estonian mark were in a good situation. It was only in December 1923 when former Prime Minister Otto Strandman of the Estonian Labour Party criticized the Minister of Finance Georg Vestel in the parliament for incorrect spending of state treasury. Westel was divested of office and Strandman's criticism led to the eventual resignation of Päts's 2nd cabinet in 1924 and led Päts to distance himself from public politics for seven years. Otto Strandman became Minister of Finance in 1924. He implemented his New Economic Policy (uus majanduspoliitika) of economic redevelopment, which stabilized the Estonian mark and detached the Estonian economy from dependence of trade with Russia.[24] Dependence on Russia and hyperinflation could have affected the social situation in Estonia crucially, especially in the light of 1 December 1924 communist coup d'état attempt.[88]

 
Päts in diplomatic uniform (circa 1936)

While Päts has been seen by some as a politician who "destroyed democracy" with the 1934 self-coup, many Estonians today understand the threat the Vaps Movement could have caused to democracy and internal and external security. Furthermore, the "coup" was initially recommended by Päts' political opponent Jaan Tõnisson himself, and was supported by the democratically elected parliament (Riigikogu).[33] as well as the moderate wing of the Estonian Socialist Party.[citation needed]

According to some historians however,[who?] Päts and his close allies used the 1934 coup for their own personal gains and not to keep the Vaps Movement from taking power. Several members of the Päts family gained important positions ranging from clerical to cultural fields. Others have criticized the long time it took to adopt a new constitution, which was more than three years.[89]

Päts was generally considered to be a rather "modest man" for a politician. He has been criticised for undue self-promotion: For example, during his own rule, he was awarded with several state decorations. He was nominated honorary citizen of some larger Estonian towns and some parishes. During the years of his presidency, the official state celebrations of the Estonian Independence Day began the day before, on Päts's birthday.[90] Päts was also the first and only person in interwar Estonia, who had postage stamps with his picture made and circulated, starting from 1936.[91]

In 2017, a memorial to Päts was planned for the park on the south side of the Toompea Castle, but the country's president at the time, Kersti Kaljulaid, criticised the decision,[92] saying:

While it is true that everyone's actions must be evaluated in the context of their time, I, too, am among those who believe that the Era of Silence had its role in things going as wrong for us as they did. When the circle of decision-makers becomes narrow, the politician no longer has a strong enough base and this is definitely a problem — it was a problem back then as well.[93]

Päts' actions prior to, and around the time of, the 1940 Soviet invasion and occupation of Estonia have been questioned. Apparently, in 1918, Päts refused to compromise with the Soviet communists, but in 1940, he "handed over" Estonia to the same Soviet communists without many objections — this controversy has led to theories, that Päts was either a Soviet agent, a collaborator, took the Soviet invasion as inevitable or was just ill-minded and failed to deal with the situation.[87]

One of the more prominent modern critics of Päts, Magnus Ilmjärv, has suggested that Soviet Russia sought since the 1920s to literally buy off some of the top-level Estonian politicians. He suggests that the Soviets saw Päts and his conservative Farmers' Assemblies party to be the most suitable. The easiest way to influence Päts and his party is said to have been the Estonian-Russian Chamber of Commerce. Päts was secretly very Russian-minded, as he grew up in a Russian-speaking home. Ilmjärv even claims that Päts had suggested federation between Estonia and the Soviet Union to the Soviet embassy in Tallinn.[94]

Ilmjärv claims that Päts was against any "Baltic Union" that was propagated by the Estonian Minister of Foreign Affairs Kaarel Robert Pusta. Päts is even documented to have said to the Soviet ambassador that he was against politicians like Pusta and he desired to create a new constitution that would reduce the power of the Riigikogu. Through Päts, the Soviet Union is said to have gotten Pusta out of government cabinet and with him, also end the ideas of a united Baltic state.[94]

It is also claimed that Päts purposefully gave up valuable information to the Soviets, when he negotiated the Estonian-Russian commerce treaty for Estonia. Päts also supported giving concession rights of the Narva River hydroelectric power plant to the German enterprise Siemens-Schuckert Werke that already had many projects in Russia and was influenced by it.[94]

An Estonian oil syndicate became a joint Estonian-Soviet enterprise in 1928 and Päts was hired by it as a legal consultant in 1930. His annual salary was $4,000, which was twice as much as the State Elder earned and more than eight times as much as Päts earned as a member of parliament. The purpose of the joint enterprise for the Soviets was not supposed to be business-related, but only to attract Päts. This official salary by the Soviet Union has thus been seen as the salary for his long-term cooperation with the Soviets. After Päts's coup d'état, the Soviet Union increased economic cooperation with Estonian enterprises.[94]

Other theories maintain that Päts trusted the Soviet officials and had befriended some of the Soviet leaders. It is also possible, that the NKVD controlled Päts's health or the information that reached him.[95] Finnish historian Martti Turtola claims that Päts's actions were in accordance with the Soviet Union's demands already since the signing of the Soviet–Estonian Mutual Assistance Treaty on 28 September 1939 and he did not even once try to find more suitable compromises.[96]

It is also suggested that Päts's bad health and loneliness did not let him realistically analyze the situation.[95] Furthermore, it is suggested that Päts and his cabinet lacked the necessary knowledge in international affairs and the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of non-aggression between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany may have come as a shock to the Päts cabinet.[96]

Another theory suggests, that Päts knew of the outbreaking war between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union and was only looking for a way for Estonia to survive the short period in between.[95] It is suggested[by whom?] that Päts knew of the difficulty of the situation and tried to keep Estonians as safe as possible by avoiding war with the Soviets and buying time. While trying not to give the Soviet Union a chance to punish the Estonians, he also continuously postponed the mobilization, which eventually never even took place, unlike in Latvia and Lithuania in 1939–1940. Under international law a war would have invalidated the Tartu Peace Treaty.[96] As a lawyer, he also had to understand that his decisions were not valid when forced by an occupying power.[95]

Legacy

 
Statue for Konstantin Päts in his birthplace Tahkuranna. Erected in 1939, it was removed by the Soviets in 1940. The statue was restored in 1989, exactly fifty years after it was first erected.

Konstantin Päts was relatively successful in internal politics. After adopting the constitution, his party was in all the government cabinets, except for Friedrich Karl Akel's and August Rei's cabinets and Jaan Tõnisson's fourth cabinet. This makes it 4,017 days (89%) in the government (of 4,497 in 1921–1933). Päts was himself the State Elder four times, a total of 1,476 days (33%). He never filled any other position in the government besides the head of government (except for the additional minister portfolios in the provisional government).

Päts served as the chairman of the Farmers' Assemblies party only unofficially and he was considered to be a bad partisan and often formed the opposition within the party. Therefore, he seldom took part of their official meetings. Only in 1933, he was made honorary chairman of the party.[97]

Membership in the parliament:

Päts's ideology went through major changes during his career. During the 1905 Revolution, he was considered a socialist, as he advocated progressive ideas that were considered socialist at the time. During his exile years, he became more of a social liberal, trying to use the best of both ideologies. By the time Estonia became independent, he had become a conservative, and showed influences of statism during his authoritarian years.[98]

According to international law and the Estonian constitution, Päts's actions were of no effect from the beginning of the occupation, or at least from 21 June 1940, when Andrei Zhdanov forced him to appoint a puppet cabinet led by Johannes Vares. Estonia's official position since the end of the Soviet era has been that the laws passed by the Vares cabinet and promulgated by Päts were void in any case as they had not ratified by the parliament's upper chamber (Riiginõukogu) as required by the constitution.[99] The upper chamber was dissolved soon after the occupation and was never reconvened.

Legally, Päts remained the de jure President until his death in 1956. His active duties went to the last pre-occupation Prime Minister Jüri Uluots, who let Otto Tief form a government in 1944, before the Soviet reoccupation. After Uluots died in Stockholm in 1945, presidential duties went to the oldest member of Tief's cabinet, August Rei, who formed the Estonian Government in Exile in 1953. The last Prime Minister in duties of the President, Heinrich Mark, handed over his credentials to the incoming President Lennart Georg Meri on 8 October 1992.[100]

A number of places and institutions in Estonia have been named after Konstantin Päts. Kentmanni street in Tallinn was named after Konstantin Päts in 1939–1940 and 1941–1944[101] and Lossi street in Põltsamaa was named after him in 1936–1940.[102] Konstantin Päts Boarding School of Tallinn was opened after Päts's own initiative for children with respiratory disorders.[103] During Päts's presidency, he had the creamy "Staatspräsident Päts" rose cultivar named after him and the flowers are being grown in the Kadriorg Park in Tallinn, near the presidential palace.[104]

A museum of Konstantin Päts was set up in 1991 in the Tallinn Botanical Gardens, where Päts's farmstead remains. The museum still exists, but the farmstead was returned to Päts's descendants in 1995.[105]

Päts has been portrayed in literature, one of the best known is the satirical Memoirs of Ivan Orav by Andrus Kivirähk, where Päts is portrayed as a true people's person, who was beloved by the entire nation and who was a thoroughly good person. In the puppet political satire show Pehmed ja karvased Päts is portrayed as a talking bust sculpture that is placed in the cellar of a governmental building together with other former presidents.[106] Periods of Päts's life as a side character were also portrayed in the television series Tuulepealne maa.[107]

Remains

 
Konstantin and Helma Päts' graves in Tallinn Metsakalmistu cemetery (2019).

In 1988, Estonians Henn Latt and Valdur Timusk decided to search for Konstantin Päts's remains in Russia. They reached Burashevo village, 15 km from Kalinin (now Tver), where Päts had been a patient in the hospital. They met his last doctor Ksenya Gusseva, who described Päts's funeral in 1956. She said that Päts was buried like a president – in a coffin, unlike other deceased patients of the time. On 22 June 1990, his grave was dug up and the remains were reburied in Tallinn Metsakalmistu cemetery on 21 October 1990.[108][109] In 2011, a commemorative cross was placed in Burashevo village, where Päts was once buried.[110]

Personal life

 
Konstantin Päts and his wife Helma.

In 1901, Konstantin Päts married Wilhelma ("Helma") Ida Emilie Peedi (b. 1878),[111] whom he had met in Pärnu High School. They had two sons, Leo and Viktor. Konstantin left his family for exile in 1905; and his second son was born while he still resided in Switzerland. They were united when Konstantin moved to Ollila, Finland. His wife died of lung disease in 1910 while he was imprisoned in Saint Petersburg, and Päts never remarried. His children were raised by his wife's unmarried sister Johana (Johanna) Wilhelmine Alexsandra Peedi.[5] Konstantin Päts also had at least one godson.[112]

Päts was seen as a kind person, who was able to give good speeches and who had grown up in a rural area and therefore had a heart for the land. He took a special interest in issues related to children. He often donated money to large families and schools and organized events for students, which he also took part in. He was also known to take long walks in the morning in the Kadriorg park around the Presidential Palace and to get into conversations with park workers.[5] Konstantin Päts had diabetes.[90]

In 1919, Päts rented, organized, and later bought a farmstead on the land detached from Väo Manor, just outside Tallinn.[113] He was later awarded a farmstead, like many other participants of and contributors to the Estonian War of Independence. His farmstead, however, was in Kloostrimetsa, in a prime location just outside Tallinn.[114] Currently located within the Tallinn Botanic Garden, the farmstead has been returned to Päts's descendants.[76]

Descendants

Konstantin's eldest son, Leo Päts (1902–1988), managed to escape to Finland in 1939. He eventually moved on to Sweden, where he died in 1988.[115] Konstantin's second son, Viktor Päts (1906–1952), died in Butyrka prison in Moscow on 4 March 1952.[76] Viktor's sons Henn (Enn; 1936–1944) and Matti (b. 1933) were sent to an orphanage in 1941 but were soon separated. They were united once a week, until Henn died of starvation in Matti's arms in 1944.[75]

All living descendants of Konstantin Päts are the children and grandchildren of Matti Päts, who returned from Russia with his mother Helgi-Alice in 1946.[116] Helgi-Alice, however, was arrested again in 1950 and sentenced to 10 years in prison in Kazakh SSR and returned in 1955.[78] Matti Päts has been the director of the Estonian Patent Office since 1991; he has also been a member of the Riigikogu and Tallinn city council. He was even seen as a potential candidate for the 2001 Presidential election by the conservative wing of the Pro Patria Union.[117]

Awards

Bibliography

  • Päts, Konstantin; Karjahärm, Toomas (1999). Eesti riik I. Eesti mõttelugu. Tartu: Ilmamaa. ISBN 9985-878-26-4.
  • Päts, Konstantin; Karjahärm, Toomas (2001). Eesti riik II. Eesti mõttelugu. Tartu: Ilmamaa. ISBN 9985-77-009-9.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Vares was prime minister under the illegal Soviet occupation and has therefore not been recognized as a Prime Minister of Estonia by the Government of Estonia
  2. ^ Vares was prime minister under the illegal Soviet occupation and has therefore not been recognized as a Prime Minister of Estonia by the Government of Estonia
  3. ^ Estonian pronunciation: [ˈkons.tɑnʲ.tin ˈpætʲs]

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Further reading

  • Turtola, Martti (2003). President Konstantin Päts: Eesti ja Soome teed. Tallinn: Tänapäev. ISBN 978-9985-62-117-2.

External links

  • Konstantin Päts on official site of the President of Estonia
  • Newspaper clippings about Konstantin Päts in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

konstantin, päts, february, february, 1874, january, 1956, estonian, statesman, country, president, 1938, 1940, päts, most, influential, politicians, independent, democratic, republic, estonia, during, decades, prior, world, also, served, five, times, country,. Konstantin Pats c 23 February O S 11 February 1874 1 18 January 1956 was an Estonian statesman and the country s president in 1938 1940 Pats was one of the most influential politicians of the independent democratic Republic of Estonia and during the two decades prior to World War II he also served five times as the country s prime minister After the 16 17 June 1940 Soviet invasion and occupation of Estonia President Pats remained formally in office for over a month until he was forced to resign imprisoned by the new Stalinist regime and deported to the USSR where he died in 1956 Konstantin PatsPats in 1934 1st President of EstoniaIn office 24 April 1938 23 July 1940Prime MinisterKaarel Eenpaluas Acting Prime MinisterKaarel EenpaluJuri Uluots Johannes Vares a Succeeded byJuri Uluotsas Prime Minister in duties of the President in ExileLennart Merias President after restoration of independence Johannes Varesas Prime Minister in duties of the President during the Soviet occupation b Chairman of theCouncil of Ministers of theProvisional Government of EstoniaIn office 24 February 1918 12 November 1918Preceded byIndependence declared position establishedSucceeded byhimselfas Prime Minister of the Provisional GovernmentPrime Minister of the Provisional Government of EstoniaIn office 12 November 1918 8 May 1919Preceded byhimselfas Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Provisional GovernmentSucceeded byOtto August Strandmannas Prime Minister2nd 4th 11th 14th and 16thState Elder of EstoniaIn office 25 January 1921 21 November 1922Preceded byAnts PiipSucceeded byJuhan KukkIn office 2 August 1923 26 March 1924Preceded byJuhan KukkSucceeded byFriedrich Karl AkelIn office 12 February 1931 19 February 1932Preceded byOtto StrandmanSucceeded byJaan TeemantIn office 1 November 1932 18 May 1933Preceded byKarl August EinbundSucceeded byJaan TonissonIn office 21 October 1933 24 January 1934Preceded byJaan TonissonSucceeded byhimselfas Prime Minister in duties of the State Elder6th Prime Minister of Estonia in duties of the State Elder of EstoniaIn office 24 January 1934 3 September 1937Preceded byhimselfas State ElderSucceeded byhimselfas President RegentPresident Regent of EstoniaIn office 3 September 1937 9 May 1938Preceded byhimselfas Prime Minister in duties of the State ElderSucceeded byhimselfas PresidentKaarel Eenpaluas Prime MinisterPersonal detailsBorn 1874 02 23 23 February 1874Tahkuranna Parish Governorate of Livonia Russian EmpireDied18 January 1956 1956 01 18 aged 81 Burashevo Kalininsky District Kalinin Oblast Russian SFSR Soviet UnionNationalityEstonianPolitical partyCountry People s Union 1917 1920 Farmers Assemblies 1920 1932 Union of Settlers and Smallholders 1932 1935 SpouseWilhelmine Helma Ida Emilie PatsChildrenLeoViktorAlma materUniversity of TartuProfessionLawyer journalist politicianSignaturePats was one of the first Estonians to become active in politics and he then started a famous nearly four decades long political rivalry with Jaan Tonisson first through journalism with his newspaper Teataja later through politics Although Pats was sentenced to death in absentia during the Russian Revolution of 1905 he was able to flee abroad first to Switzerland then to Finland where he continued his literary work He returned to Estonia then part of the Russian Empire and had to serve a prison sentence in 1910 1911 After the February Revolution in 1917 Pats headed the provincial government of the newly formed Autonomous Governorate of Estonia which was forced to go underground after the Bolshevik coup in November 1917 On 19 February 1918 Pats became one of the three members of the Estonian Salvation Committee that issued the Estonian Declaration of Independence on 24 February 1918 He headed the Estonian Provisional Government 1918 1919 although he was also imprisoned by the German occupation regime for several months in 1918 In the provisional government Pats also served as Minister of Internal Affairs 1918 and Minister of War 1918 1919 that left him in charge of organizing the Estonian military in the War of Independence against the Soviet Russian invasion During the 1920s and early 1930s Pats led one of the more prominent right wing parties of the time the conservative Farmers Assemblies which eventually merged into another party the Union of Settlers and Smallholders in 1932 Pats was the Speaker of the Parliament Riigikogu 1922 1923 2 and served five times as State Elder a post equivalent to that of president in Estonia s radically parliamentarian system 1921 1922 1923 1924 1931 1932 1932 1933 and 1933 1934 During his last term as State Elder he organized a self coup to neutralise the right wing populist Vaps Movement He was supported by the army and the parliament During the 1934 1938 Era of Silence many reforms were made and the economy grew while he prolonged clarification needed the return of constitutional order Largely supported by General Johan Laidoner Commander of the Estonian Defence Forces 3 Pats ruled as Prime Minister in duties of the State Elder 1934 1937 and President Regent 1937 1938 until a new constitution was adopted in 1938 after which Pats was elected the first President of Estonia During his presidency the Stalinist Soviet Union invaded and occupied Estonia in June 1940 As president he was forced to sign decrees for over a month until being arrested and deported to Soviet Russia where he died in 1956 Contents 1 Family 2 Early life 3 Career 3 1 Journalism 3 2 Early political career 3 3 1917 1918 Autonomy and German occupation 3 4 1918 1920 War of Independence 3 5 1918 1940 Independent Republic of Estonia 3 6 1939 1940 World War II Soviet invasion of Estonia 3 7 Deportation to Soviet Russia and imprisonment 4 Commercial and social activities 5 Foreign relations 6 Criticism 7 Legacy 8 Remains 9 Personal life 10 Descendants 11 Awards 12 Bibliography 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksFamily Edit Pats with his family from left brother Nikolai sister Marianna father Jakob brother Voldemar mother Olga brother Peeter and Konstantin Pats far right Pats parents originated from Holstre near Viljandi in the then Governorate of Livonia The family name Pats means a loaf in Estonian and is thought to derive from his patrilineal ancestors from the beginning of the 18th century who distributed free bread from their mill during a famine The mill was initially named the Pats Mill and Pats originally Paets was later adopted as an official surname 4 The father of Konstantin Jakob Jaagup Pats 1842 1909 was a housebuilder from Heimtali near Viljandi Konstantin s mother Olga Pats nee Tumanova 1847 1914 was an orphan who had been raised as a native Russian speaker reportedly by the Razumovsky family where her adoptive father at one time was the mayor of Valga It has also been claimed that she grew up with the Krudener family where the adoptive father Baron Krudener was her uncle however it is more likely that she served the Krudener family later as a governess Jakob and Olga met while they were both in the service of the Krudener family 4 Konstantin had an older brother Nikolai 1871 1940 three younger brothers Paul 1876 1881 Voldemar 1878 1958 and Peeter 1880 1942 and a younger sister Marianne 1888 1947 Since their mother Olga was raised in a wealthy Russian family their father Jakob converted from Lutheranism to Eastern Orthodox Christianity The children were all brought up in strong Orthodox traditions 4 The family initially lived in Viljandi Pats father Jakob was one of the Estonian nationalist farmers who in 1865 petitioned to Emperor Alexander II of Russia to remove the what they considered oppressive aristocratic privileges of Baltic German landowners After the petition Jakob came into conflict with the local nobility and in 1873 he was forced to move to Tahkuranna near Parnu As Pats father was unable to find a job in Tahkuranna the family moved to a rental apartment in Parnu in 1882 Three years later Jakob bought himself some land in Raekula near Parnu where they initially lived in a roadside tavern but built a new house after the tavern burned down Jakob divided his land into smaller lots and built half a dozen new houses on the site which eventually grew into a borough and later became a district of Parnu 4 Early life EditKonstantin Pats was born on 23 February O S 11 February 1874 near Tahkuranna According to locals memories he was born in a barn of a roadside farm since his mother could not reach a doctor in time 5 He was baptized in the Tahkuranna Orthodox Church 6 Konstantin started his education in the Orthodox parish school of Tahkuranna 5 In Parnu Konstantin attended the Russian language Orthodox parish school Later he attended the Riga Clerical Seminar in 1887 1892 but after deciding not to become a priest he left for the high school in Parnu 7 From 1894 to 1898 he attended the Faculty of Law of Tartu University from which he graduated as a cand jur After graduation Pats served in the Russian 96th Infantry Regiment of Omsk in Pskov and was promoted an ensign 7 After rejecting an academic career in Tartu he moved to Tallinn in 1900 to start a political career 8 Career EditJournalism Edit In Tallinn Konstantin Pats started his career as an assistant at the advocacy of Jaan Poska but the job was not satisfactory for Pats In Tartu Jaan Tonisson had already founded his nationalist newspaper Postimees in 1891 Pats was planning to found his own in Tallinn The first inspiration came from writers Eduard Vilde and A H Tammsaare who could not get a licence from the Ministry of Internal Affairs because of their social democratic views Instead they used the help of Pats as an unknown lawyer with an affiliation in the Orthodox Church 9 Pats was assumed by the authorities to have had established a newspaper that was loyal to the Empire and would unite all Orthodox Estonians however in reality his newspaper had a radical political content The first issue of the Teataja The Gazette came out on 23 October O S 10 October 1901 starting a rivalry not only between Postimees and Teataja but also between Jaan Tonisson and Konstantin Pats personally for the position of leadership in the Estonian nationalist movement Unlike the more nationalist and radically ideological Postimees Teataja emphasized the importance of education and commerce for the nationalist cause The work was made difficult by the strict censorship policies imposed by the Russian Empire s governmental authorities 9 Early political career Edit Pats s first political goal was to take power in the towns where Baltic Germans still controlled the municipal governments Pats served as a municipal adviser in Tallinn from 1904 7 and together with Jaan Poska he organized an electoral block between Estonians and liberal Russians which managed to win at the 1904 Tallinn municipal elections Pats became a member of the city council and in April 1905 he became the deputy mayor chairing the city council 5 His active work at the town government left him little time for his newspaper A group of revolutionaries led by Hans Poogelmann had taken control in Teataja s staff and published anti government articles and called people for a revolution 9 During the 1905 Revolution Pats was already an activist on self government reform where he supported national autonomy in the Baltic governorates 10 In the escalation of the revolution his newspaper was closed and its staff members arrested Pats found out about this in advance and managed to escape to Switzerland only to find out that he had been condemned to death in the Russian Empire 5 Ensign officer Konstantin Pats in 1917 In 1906 he moved to Helsinki Finland where he continued his literary and journalist career Much of his work was published anonymously in Estonia He also advised local municipalities on land reform questions In 1908 Pats moved to Ollila which was located at the Russian border near Saint Petersburg There he became one of the editors for the Estonian newspaper Peterburi Teataja The St Petersburg Gazette although he still resided in Finland In Ollila he was reunited with his family with whom he had parted when he escaped to Switzerland in 1905 5 After his wife had become seriously ill Pats found out that he was no longer condemned to death in the Russian Empire He moved back to Estonia in 1909 to face only minor charges From February 1910 he served time in Kresty Prison in Saint Petersburg while his wife died of tuberculosis in Switzerland where Pats had sent her for treatment During his imprisonment he was able to study foreign languages and write articles to be published in newspapers 5 Pats was released on 25 March 1911 The governor of the Governorate of Estonia complained about Pats s activity in Estonia in 1905 and pleaded for the government not to let him return 11 He was banned from living in the Governorates of Estonia and Livonia for six years However strong connections with Jaan Poska helped him return to Estonia where he founded another newspaper Tallinna Teataja The Tallinn Gazette 5 From February 1916 Pats served as an officer in Tallinn In July 1917 he was elected as Chairman of the Supreme Committee of Estonian Soldiers where he actively worked to form Estonian units in the Imperial Army During the war he also organized the cooperation between Estonians and liberal Baltic German estate owners 5 1917 1918 Autonomy and German occupation Edit Konstantin Pats was one of the authors of the Estonian Declaration of Independence in February 1918 In 1917 when German forces were advancing on Estonia Pats was able to avoid the mobilization Since the control after the February Revolution was in the hands of the Russian Provisional Government Estonians were pursuing for an autonomy within the Russian Empire In local debates on whether to form one or two autonomous governorates in Estonia Konstantin Pats who supported a single autonomous governorate took yet another victory from Jaan Tonisson who supported two autonomous governorates After Estonian mass protests in Petrograd the provisional government formed the autonomous Governorate of Estonia on 12 April O S 30 March 1917 8 The Estonian Provincial Assembly Maapaev was elected Pats joined and became one of the leading figures of the Estonian Country People s Union which took 13 of the 55 seats Left and right wing politicians gained an equal number of seats in the Provincial Assembly which made it difficult to appoint a speaker for the assembly Jaan Tonisson of the centre right nominated the candidacy of Konstantin Pats who however lost by only one vote to the almost unknown Artur Vallner At first Pats chose not to join any of the parliamentary groups but eventually joined the most right wing Democratic group 12 Pats replaced Jaan Raamot as chairman of the provincial government on 25 October O S 12 October 1917 13 During the October Revolution Bolsheviks took control in Estonia and the Provincial Assembly was disbanded After failing to give over official documents Pats was arrested three times until he finally went underground 5 Since the Bolshevik rule in Estonia was relatively weak the Council of Elders of the Maapaev declared on 28 November O S 15 November 1917 that the assembly was the only legally elected and constituted authority in Estonia Since even the Council of Elders was too big to work underground the three membered Estonian Salvation Committee was formed on 19 February 1918 and Konstantin Pats became one of its members 8 Soviet Russian forces evacuating the Salvation Committee wanted to use the interregnum and declare Estonia s independence On 21 February 1918 a delegation with Pats was sent to Haapsalu which was chosen to be the site of the initial declaration but they were forced to head back to Tallinn since the German forces had captured Haapsalu on the very same day Attempts to reach Tartu before the German occupation had also failed 14 When the Soviet Russian forces had finally evacuated from Tallinn and the German forces were advancing the Salvation Committee issued the Estonian Declaration of Independence on 24 February 1918 the declaration had also been delivered to Parnu where it was proclaimed on 23 February Instantly the Estonian Provisional Government was formed and Konstantin Pats became the Chairman of the Council of Ministers the Minister of Internal Affairs and the Minister of Commerce and Industry 15 The position of Minister of Commerce and Industry probably remained vacant in reality 16 On 25 February 1918 the German forces captured Tallinn Konstantin Pats was arrested on 16 June 1918 He was sent to several prison camps in Latvia until he was finally placed in a camp in Grodno Poland 17 He was released at the end of the war on 17 November 1918 18 After the Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers Juri Vilms mysteriously died in Finland Jaan Poska led the underground republic After Germany surrendered Konstantin Pats s 2nd cabinet of the provisional government took office on 12 November 1918 making Pats the Prime Minister of the provisional government and the Minister of Internal Affairs 19 After Pats arrived in Tallinn and the Maapaev had gathered Pats s 3rd cabinet of the provisional government was formed on 27 November 1918 with Pats as Prime Minister of the provisional government and also the Minister of War leaving it up to him to organize national defence However due to his multiple portfolios in the government much of the work in the Ministry of War was delegated to higher officers 20 1918 1920 War of Independence Edit Pats gave the first traditional speech at the Independence Day parade on 24 February 1919 Weak representation in the left wing dominated Constituent Assembly left Konstantin Pats with little power in composing the land reform law and the 1920 constitution On 28 November 1918 the Soviet Russian Red Army invaded Estonia and conquered the border city of Narva marking the beginning of the Estonian War of Independence By January 1919 Estonians had forced the Bolsheviks to retreat and by 24 February 1919 the entire Estonian territory was under the control of the provisional government In his speech at the 1919 Independence Day parade Pats said We have to secure our economy so we could become less dependent on our allies In order to avoid bankruptcy our new state needs a solid foundation of agriculture 5 In April 1919 the Estonian Constituent Assembly was elected but the Estonian Country People s Union won only 8 of the 120 seats leaving the majority to centre left parties On 9 May 1919 Otto August Strandman took over as the first Prime Minister In the summer of 1919 Pats opposed the Estonian intervention into the war against the Baltic German Landeswehr in neighboring Latvia but as he was in opposition and supported only by a small parliamentary minority the then government decided to start the Landeswehr War which ended in the Estonian Latvian victory After the war with Soviet Russia had also ended with Estonian victory on 2 February 1920 the majority left wing Constituent Assembly adopted a radical land reform law and the first constitution which brought about a proportionally representative and very fractured parliament rapidly changing government cabinets and a nominal head of state whose office had little more than ceremonial powers only 21 1918 1940 Independent Republic of Estonia Edit In September 1919 Pats formed a new political party the agrarian conservative Farmers Assemblies which was based on the Country People s Union 22 In 1920 elections the party won 21 seats in the 100 member Riigikogu and from 25 January 1921 to 21 November 1922 Konstantin Pats was the State Elder and led the first constitutional government cabinet It was a centre right coalition with three centrist parties The cabinet fell soon after the centre left Estonian Labour Party left the coalition because of Pats s right wing policies and criticism of corruption within the Bank of Estonia After stepping down as head of government Pats served as President speaker of the Riigikogu from 20 November 1922 to 7 June 1923 23 In 1923 elections Farmers Assemblies took 23 seats On 2 August 1923 Pats became State Elder for the second time A similar centre right coalition with three centrist parties lasted again until the Estonian Labour Party left the coalition forcing Pats to step down on 26 March 1924 Otto August Strandman had openly criticized Pats for his role in corruption within the Bank of Estonia and economic policies that depended on trade with Russia Pats kept away from office politics for seven years 24 Support for his party did not decline From 15 December 1925 to 9 December 1927 Jaan Teemant of the Farmers Assemblies was the State Elder In 1926 elections Farmers Assemblies took again 23 seats and Jaan Teemant continued as State Elder Already in 1927 Pats criticized members of the Riigikogu saying that they had been causing the instability of government coalitions rather than ideological differences 25 At the 6th Congress of Farmers Assemblies in 1929 the party was in opposition to August Rei s leftist government and Pats among others demanded changes in the constitution a smaller parliament a separate presidential office and fight against corruption 26 In 1929 elections Farmers Assemblies took 24 seats and Pats served his third term as State Elder from 12 February 1931 to 19 February 1932 It was an ideologically wide coalition with the Estonian Socialist Workers Party and the centre right Estonian People s Party On 26 January 1932 Farmers Assemblies and the left wing agrarian Settlers Party merged to form the Union of Settlers and Smallholders only to be followed by the formation of the National Centre Party by four centrist parties Pats s cabinet resigned making Jaan Teemant the new State Elder 27 In 1932 elections the newly formed Union of Settlers and Smallholders won 42 seats in Riigikogu and one of the party s leaders Karl August Einbund became the State Elder On 3 October 1932 the coalition between the Union of Settlers and Smallholders and National Centre Party broke up with the latter wanting to devalue the Estonian kroon during the Great Depression Pats himself was one of the key opponents of devaluation 28 A month long government crisis started Since there were only three major parties in the Riigikogu the third being the Estonian Socialist Workers Party no functioning coalition could be found until special authority was given to Konstantin Pats to form a grand coalition between all three major parties His cabinet took office on 1 November 1932 On 25 November 1932 Pats s government was given more powers by the disunited Riigikogu to deal with the economic crisis His government was forced to resign on 18 May 1933 after the National Centre Party still favouring devaluation left the coalition and the Union of Settlers and Smallholders had lost many of its members to the reactivated Settlers party 29 The succeeding Tonisson s National Centre Party cabinet devalued the Estonian kroon by 35 on 27 June 1933 Although the devaluation proved to be successful and had a good impact to the economy later under his own rule Pats never recognized his mistake by opposing the devaluation 28 Lack of government stability led to several new constitution proposals but only the third proposal by the right wing populist Vaps Movement was accepted in a referendum on 14 16 October 1933 Pats was elected on 21 October 1933 to head the non aligned transitional government to the second constitution Until 24 January 1934 he served as State Elder but after the new constitution came into force he became Prime Minister The new constitution was a drift from democracy giving a lot of power to the head of state still named State Elder and leaving the Riigikogu only an advisory role 30 Both Pats and Tonisson his predecessor as head of state tried to control the Vaps Movement that was seen by democratic parties as a local National Socialist party that had to be kept away from power 3 In August 1933 State Elder Jaan Tonisson had declared a state of emergency and temporary censorship 31 that was lifted only when Pats s transitional government took office 32 The weak government response only gained support for the Vaps Movement and in early January 1934 the movement won municipal elections in several urban municipalities 33 On 27 February 1934 Pats himself imposed a law prohibiting members of the military to take part in politics This action forced several thousand members of the army to secede from the Vaps Movement 34 Pats was one of the candidates in the presidential elections that were supposed to be held in April 1934 but the Vaps Movement candidate Andres Larka and even lieutenant general Johan Laidoner were both thought to be more popular candidates than Pats The campaign was accompanied by threats by the Vaps Movement to take power and rumours of a forthcoming coup In early March 1934 Pats s political opponent Jaan Tonisson compared the Vaps Movement with the Nazis in Germany and advised the government to take necessary action against the movement 33 Konstantin Pats then carried out a self coup on 12 March 1934 35 He was supported by general Johan Laidoner and the army 3 Oru palace in Toila was used as the head of state s summer residence by Pats The buildings were destroyed in World War II A state of emergency was declared and the Vaps Movement was disbanded with about 400 members arrested including the presidential candidate Andres Larka Johan Laidoner was appointed Commander in Chief of the Armies 36 The period following the coup became known as the Era of Silence and was marked by the collapse of democracy and a gradual transition to authoritarianism 35 Speaking in the parliament on 15 March 1934 Pats stated that the Estonian people were blinded by the propaganda of the Vaps Movement and ill minded because of it and the power could therefore not be in the hands of the people 37 On 15 16 March 1934 the parliament Riigikogu approved Pats actions in hopes of saving Estonian democracy Pats postponed the presidential elections for the duration of the emergency expressing concern about emotions being too high because of anti government agitation by the Vaps Movement 36 In August 1934 Pats appointed Karl August Einbund as Minister of Internal Affairs making him the third leading figure of the era next to Pats and Laidoner In September the Agitation and Propaganda Department was created 38 in October all parliamentary work was suspended after the opposition criticized the political restrictions 39 and in December censorship was introduced 40 In February 1935 the Patriotic League Isamaaliit was formed to replace political parties 41 while all other political organizations were suspended in March 1935 Pats stated in his opinions at the time that political organizations should unite the society not fragment it 42 The initial state of emergency was declared for six months in March 1934 but after September 1934 Pats extended it for a year in a total of six times 43 44 45 46 47 48 Pats believed that a nation should be organized not by political views into parties but by vocation into respective chambers and a series of state corporative institutions were thus introduced following in big part the example of contemporary corporatism in Fascist Italy Pats had promoted the idea of corporate chambers already in 1918 but the idea did not gain support from strong left wing parties at the time Pats was the main proponent of the formation of the chambers and the first two were founded while his government cabinets were in office in 1924 and 1931 Fifteen more chambers were established between 1934 and 1936 bringing the total number to 17 49 On 7 December 1935 a coup d etat attempt the Estonia plot named after the Estonia Theatre by the Vaps Movement was exposed More than 750 people were arrested throughout the state crushing the movement conclusively 50 Leaders of the movement were soon given court sentences as hard as 20 years of forced labour 51 however they were all pardoned two years later in December 1937 52 Meanwhile Jaan Tonisson had criticized Pats s inability to bring the new constitution into effect In July 1935 Tonisson was ousted from the Postimees board 53 In October 1936 four former State Elders Juhan Kukk Ants Piip Jaan Teemant and Jaan Tonisson sent a joint letter to Pats demanding civil freedoms and restoration of democratic regime 54 Reluctance to restore democracy also caused student riots in Tartu in the autumn of 1936 which led to clashes with the police and disbandment of the student council of the University of Tartu 55 The lack of organized opposition during the emergency made it easier for Pats to pass reforms Pats ruled mostly through presidential decrees because the Riigikogu was needed to pass real laws The economy grew and the infrastructure industry and education were developed The Estonianization of personal names was supported the most prominent example being Minister of Internal Affairs Karl August Einbund who changed his name to Kaarel Eenpalu 56 Pats also signed a decree to bring the Supreme Court from Tartu to Tallinn in 1935 although all but one of the justices voted against it After the coup the Supreme Court lost many of its powers and was not able to observe the implementation of democratic principles in the country 57 Pats also founded the Tallinn Technical Institute on 15 September 1936 as the second university in Estonia Losing the Supreme Court and some faculties in the university definitely reduced the importance of Tartu in Southern Estonia the town that had historically been supportive to Pats s opponent Jaan Tonisson 58 Man with Decorations Portrait of Pats by Andrus Johani 1936 Regarding the 1934 constitution as too authoritarian Pats organised the passing of a new constitution through a referendum and a constituent assembly The corporate chambers were to be the basis of forming the assembly 59 Its formation was approved with 76 in favour in a referendum in 1936 The 1936 National Assembly elections were boycotted by the opposition in most electoral districts 60 Pats giving a speech on the 20th anniversary of the Republic of Estonia at the Freedom Square Tallinn 1938 On 28 July 1937 the assembly adopted the third constitution that was based on Pats s draft 61 A bicameral parliament was to be elected and the president was to be elected by the parliament not by the people On 3 September 1937 a 120 day period of transition began during which Pats ruled as President Regent 46 On 1 January 1938 the new constitution came into force and the 1938 parliamentary elections were held Opposition candidates were allowed to take part however they were given little or no attention in the media Pats s supporters in the National Front for the Implementation of the Constitution won 64 of the 80 seats in the lower chamber the Riigivolikogu The president who was yet to be elected was also able to directly appoint into office 10 of the 40 members of the higher chamber Riiginoukogu 62 On 23 April 1938 Konstantin Pats was elected and nominated a presidential candidate by both chambers of the parliament Riigikogu as well as by the Assembly of Municipal Representatives Jaan Tonisson was the only opposition candidate in the parliament s lower chamber Riigivolikogu Of its 80 members 65 voted for Pats and 14 for Tonisson There were no opposition candidates and no elections necessary in the upper chamber Riiginoukogu and in the Assembly of Municipal Representatives where Pats received 36 from a total of 40 and 113 from a total of 120 votes respectively 63 As both chambers of parliament and the Assembly of Municipal Representatives had elected and nominated the same candidate in accordance with the constitution a collective electoral body convened on 24 April 1938 and voted with 219 in favor of the candidate Pats and 19 ballots left empty From a total of 240 the 219 votes were more than the required 3 5 majority 144 votes 63 Pats gave the presidential oath of office in front of the parliament Riigikogu on the same day 24 April 1938 thus becoming the first President of Estonia 64 On 9 May 1938 Pats appointed Kaarel Eenpalu as Prime Minister On 5 May 1938 all political prisoners mostly communists and members of the Vaps Movement were given amnesty There is no consensus whether the so called Era of Silence ended in 1938 with the adoption of the new constitution or in 1940 with the Soviet occupation The era of 1934 1940 is generally also called the Pats Era 65 Also in 1938 a general amnesty was granted for those political prisoners of the Vaps Movement and the Communist Party who had not directly killed anyone 1939 1940 World War II Soviet invasion of Estonia Edit Estonia s leaders before the Soviet occupation celebrating the country s Independence Day for the last time on 24 February 1940 From left General Johan Laidoner President Konstantin Pats and Prime Minister Juri Uluots Destruction of Konstantin Pats statue in Tahkuranna after the Soviet invasion in 1940 After the beginning of World War II Estonia declared its neutrality but was compelled to sign the Soviet Estonian Mutual Assistance Treaty on 28 September 1939 to allow Soviet military bases and 25 000 troops in Estonia On 12 October 1939 Pats appointed Juri Uluots as a new moderate Prime Minister 66 In May 1940 Pats believed that the best option for Estonia would be to follow the Soviet leadership s Stalin s guidelines until the German Soviet war In case of such war Estonia would be saved 67 However on 16 June 1940 the Soviet Union delivered an ultimatum to the Estonian government The Estonian government was forced to accept the ultimatum and a full Soviet invasion and occupation of the entire territory of Estonia followed on 17 June 1940 68 The Soviet invaders allowed Pats to stay in office but he was forced already on 21 June 1940 to appoint a new pro Soviet puppet government with Johannes Vares as prime minister Pats became effectively a puppet himself and over the following month he signed nearly 200 decrees issued by the new Stalinist regime 69 Amongst others he signed a decree to change the electoral law allowing the new regime to organize snap elections This decree to change the law was unconstitutional since the upper house of the Estonian parliament Riigikogu had been dissolved and never reconvened The new Soviet styled sham elections were held only for the lower chamber Riigivolikogu with voters being presented with a single list of Communists and fellow travellers On Victory Day of 23 June 1940 Pats declared the greatest thing we have accomplished is the creation of the Estonian state To her we have given our strongest love our loyalty our work and our life From 29 June 1940 Pats remained under permanent house arrest 70 Even in early July Pats reportedly informed the German ambassador that he did not believe Estonia would be Sovietized 71 On 21 July 1940 the new pro Stalinist parliament proclaimed Estonia a Soviet Socialist Republic and it is claimed that only then did Pats realize the essence of the Soviet occupation 72 Deportation to Soviet Russia and imprisonment Edit On 21 July 1940 Pats sent his son Viktor to visit the United States embassy in Tallinn and to appeal for protection and asylum in the United States for himself and his family 73 The Acting US Secretary of State Sumner Welles gave permission for issuing diplomatic visas to the entire Pats family already on the next day 74 Many Soviet era sources claim that Pats had resigned from office on 21 July 1940 clarification needed According to some other sources he signed the resignation document on 22 July and the resignation was approved on 23 July 1940 making Pats formally the president of the new Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic for two days 72 Regardless of the exact chronology the then pro Soviet prime minister Vares took over the president s powers as Prime Minister in duties of the President as a mere formality and for only a few weeks Either the American visas came too late or the Pats family remained under house arrest but on 30 July 1940 together with his son Viktor and Viktor s wife Helgi Alice and sons Matti and Henn Konstantin Pats was deported to Ufa Russia where they arrived on 9 August There they lived under surveillance in a large apartment for a year In Ufa Pats wrote his memoirs of his time in office and pleaded that his grandsons their mother and nanny would be sent to either Switzerland or Italy since his grandson Henn was already in a bad health After receiving no answer he pleaded for them to be sent back to Estonia In his naivety he pleaded to be exchanged with Ernst Thalmann former leader of the Communist Party of Germany who was imprisoned in Germany clarification needed After that Pats remained quiet while his son Viktor was certain that Nazi Germany would invade the Soviet Union and that he would soon be living abroad 75 The family randomly met an Estonian couple both NKVD agents in an Ufa market on 29 May 1941 They received an invitation to the family s home the next day After the visit it was claimed that both Konstantin and Viktor demonstrated particular viciousness against Joseph Stalin and Vyacheslav Molotov sympathized with Germany and announced that they were impatiently waiting for a German assault on the Soviet Union 75 Konstantin Pats as a Soviet prisoner On 26 June 1941 they were arrested and imprisoned in Ufa the children were sent to an orphanage Pats was interrogated for hours but did not take the blame Even in March 1942 he believed that the Western powers would pressure the Soviet Union to send him abroad Eventually Pats and his son were sent to Butyrka prison in Moscow and Helgi Alice to Gulag prison camps in Siberia In Butyrka prison Johan Laidoner was prisoner No 11 Konstantin Pats No 12 and Viktor No 13 76 77 On 24 March 1943 Pats was sent to forced treatment in psychoneurotic hospitals first in Kazan then in Chistopol in Tatar ASSR His forced psychiatric hospitalization was justified by his persistent claiming of being the President of Estonia citation needed On 29 April 1952 Pats was found guilty according to 58 14 and 58 10 of the Penal Code which meant counter revolutionary sabotage and anti Soviet and counter revolutionary propaganda and agitation Forced treatment was ended in 1954 and Pats was sent to a psychoneurology hospital in Jamejala Estonia Recognition by the locals and too much attention resulted in him being sent to Burashevo psychiatric hospital in Kalinin Oblast now Tver Oblast where he eventually died on 18 January 1956 78 Commercial and social activities EditBetween 1919 and 1933 Pats was chairman of the insurance company Estonian Lloyd From 1925 to 1929 Pats was chairman of the council of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry and continued as its honorary councillor from 1935 He also served as the chairman of the board of the Harju Bank and chairman of the Tallinn Exchange Committee 7 Pats was among the founders of Estonian Sports Association Kalev in 1901 and also its first deputy chairman 79 Pats was the chairman of Estonian Finnish Hungarian Association from 1925 to 1936 and continued as honorary chairman from 1936 From 1927 to 1937 he was the chairman of the Fenno Ugria foundation 7 Pats received honorary doctorates from Tartu University in 1928 Tallinn Technical University and Andhra University in India in 1938 along with honorary membership of the Learned Estonian Society in 1938 and the Estonian Academy of Sciences in 1939 In 1938 he became honorary member of the Estonian Naturalists Society and the Estonian Institute of Natural Resources He was also named honorary alumnus of the student corps Fraternitas Estica and honorary citizen of the cities of Tallinn Narva Parnu and Tartu as well as of his native Tahkuranna Parish 7 Foreign relations Edit President of Finland Pehr Evind Svinhufvud and Konstantin Pats in Narva in 1936 In 1918 Pats made an informal proposal for an Estonian Finnish personal union The contemporary leaders of independent Finland were not sufficiently interested in the union and the idea was effectively ignored and forgotten 80 Pats still bore the idea in his mind as testified by his so called political testament written in July 1940 In 1922 during his first term as State Elder he made the first Estonian official state visit to Finland He also made unofficial visits to Finland in 1931 81 1935 44 and 1937 President of Finland Pehr Evind Svinhufvud visited Pats in Estonia twice in 1934 82 and in 1936 83 President Konstantin Pats visiting Polish president Ignacy Moscicki in 1935 In 1933 Pats also made a state visit to Latvia 84 and the treaty of Baltic Entente between Estonia Latvia and Lithuania was signed in 1934 This agreement apparently was also another unsuccessful attempt to draw Finland closer to Estonia During the 1930s Estonian and Polish officials made several state visits to both countries 43 In late 1930s as the Stalinist Soviet Union took a more aggressive interest in the Baltic countries Estonia attempted to move closer to Germany in its foreign policy This change was marked by the 1936 appointment of Friedrich Akel former foreign minister as the Estonian ambassador to Germany 85 On 3 December 1938 the Estonian government officially declared the country s neutrality in the event of any military conflicts in Europe 86 Criticism EditSeveral aspects of Pats s career are still under critical public debate and various theories have been created although many of them have also seen broad criticism 87 For example Pats economic activities and business contacts with Soviet Russia have drawn significant criticism In 1920 1922 Estonia had more extensive relations with Soviet Russia than with other European countries The Russian embassy in Tallinn was at the center of Russian gold sales to the West which constituted about 4 of global gold sales in that period Estonia and the Bank of Estonia received about 2 3 of the at least 30 million gold rubles transaction fees The transactions were kept secret and mostly only the Director of the Bank of Estonia in 1920 1921 and Minister of Finance in 1921 1922 Georg Westel and the State Elder in 1921 1922 Konstantin Pats knew of these transactions 88 Even more it was the Harju Bank that belonged among others to Pats and Westel that transacted many of the gold sales Pats Westel and other big businessmen mostly members of Pats s Farmers Unions party have thus been accused of using this transaction money for their own good 88 It has also been claimed that the Bank of Estonia gave out several loans to enterprises that were related to Pats s activities and almost all other loans were given to enterprises related to the members of the bank s own council and other top level politicians Having big loans was also the reason why Pats Westel and other top level politicians did not fight the hyperinflation at the time 88 The gold exchange and big loans also boosted money circulation in Estonia which created an illusion for the wider public that the economy of Estonia and the Estonian mark were in a good situation It was only in December 1923 when former Prime Minister Otto Strandman of the Estonian Labour Party criticized the Minister of Finance Georg Vestel in the parliament for incorrect spending of state treasury Westel was divested of office and Strandman s criticism led to the eventual resignation of Pats s 2nd cabinet in 1924 and led Pats to distance himself from public politics for seven years Otto Strandman became Minister of Finance in 1924 He implemented his New Economic Policy uus majanduspoliitika of economic redevelopment which stabilized the Estonian mark and detached the Estonian economy from dependence of trade with Russia 24 Dependence on Russia and hyperinflation could have affected the social situation in Estonia crucially especially in the light of 1 December 1924 communist coup d etat attempt 88 Pats in diplomatic uniform circa 1936 While Pats has been seen by some as a politician who destroyed democracy with the 1934 self coup many Estonians today understand the threat the Vaps Movement could have caused to democracy and internal and external security Furthermore the coup was initially recommended by Pats political opponent Jaan Tonisson himself and was supported by the democratically elected parliament Riigikogu 33 as well as the moderate wing of the Estonian Socialist Party citation needed According to some historians however who Pats and his close allies used the 1934 coup for their own personal gains and not to keep the Vaps Movement from taking power Several members of the Pats family gained important positions ranging from clerical to cultural fields Others have criticized the long time it took to adopt a new constitution which was more than three years 89 Pats was generally considered to be a rather modest man for a politician He has been criticised for undue self promotion For example during his own rule he was awarded with several state decorations He was nominated honorary citizen of some larger Estonian towns and some parishes During the years of his presidency the official state celebrations of the Estonian Independence Day began the day before on Pats s birthday 90 Pats was also the first and only person in interwar Estonia who had postage stamps with his picture made and circulated starting from 1936 91 In 2017 a memorial to Pats was planned for the park on the south side of the Toompea Castle but the country s president at the time Kersti Kaljulaid criticised the decision 92 saying While it is true that everyone s actions must be evaluated in the context of their time I too am among those who believe that the Era of Silence had its role in things going as wrong for us as they did When the circle of decision makers becomes narrow the politician no longer has a strong enough base and this is definitely a problem it was a problem back then as well 93 Pats actions prior to and around the time of the 1940 Soviet invasion and occupation of Estonia have been questioned Apparently in 1918 Pats refused to compromise with the Soviet communists but in 1940 he handed over Estonia to the same Soviet communists without many objections this controversy has led to theories that Pats was either a Soviet agent a collaborator took the Soviet invasion as inevitable or was just ill minded and failed to deal with the situation 87 One of the more prominent modern critics of Pats Magnus Ilmjarv has suggested that Soviet Russia sought since the 1920s to literally buy off some of the top level Estonian politicians He suggests that the Soviets saw Pats and his conservative Farmers Assemblies party to be the most suitable The easiest way to influence Pats and his party is said to have been the Estonian Russian Chamber of Commerce Pats was secretly very Russian minded as he grew up in a Russian speaking home Ilmjarv even claims that Pats had suggested federation between Estonia and the Soviet Union to the Soviet embassy in Tallinn 94 Ilmjarv claims that Pats was against any Baltic Union that was propagated by the Estonian Minister of Foreign Affairs Kaarel Robert Pusta Pats is even documented to have said to the Soviet ambassador that he was against politicians like Pusta and he desired to create a new constitution that would reduce the power of the Riigikogu Through Pats the Soviet Union is said to have gotten Pusta out of government cabinet and with him also end the ideas of a united Baltic state 94 It is also claimed that Pats purposefully gave up valuable information to the Soviets when he negotiated the Estonian Russian commerce treaty for Estonia Pats also supported giving concession rights of the Narva River hydroelectric power plant to the German enterprise Siemens Schuckert Werke that already had many projects in Russia and was influenced by it 94 An Estonian oil syndicate became a joint Estonian Soviet enterprise in 1928 and Pats was hired by it as a legal consultant in 1930 His annual salary was 4 000 which was twice as much as the State Elder earned and more than eight times as much as Pats earned as a member of parliament The purpose of the joint enterprise for the Soviets was not supposed to be business related but only to attract Pats This official salary by the Soviet Union has thus been seen as the salary for his long term cooperation with the Soviets After Pats s coup d etat the Soviet Union increased economic cooperation with Estonian enterprises 94 Other theories maintain that Pats trusted the Soviet officials and had befriended some of the Soviet leaders It is also possible that the NKVD controlled Pats s health or the information that reached him 95 Finnish historian Martti Turtola claims that Pats s actions were in accordance with the Soviet Union s demands already since the signing of the Soviet Estonian Mutual Assistance Treaty on 28 September 1939 and he did not even once try to find more suitable compromises 96 It is also suggested that Pats s bad health and loneliness did not let him realistically analyze the situation 95 Furthermore it is suggested that Pats and his cabinet lacked the necessary knowledge in international affairs and the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact of non aggression between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany may have come as a shock to the Pats cabinet 96 Another theory suggests that Pats knew of the outbreaking war between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union and was only looking for a way for Estonia to survive the short period in between 95 It is suggested by whom that Pats knew of the difficulty of the situation and tried to keep Estonians as safe as possible by avoiding war with the Soviets and buying time While trying not to give the Soviet Union a chance to punish the Estonians he also continuously postponed the mobilization which eventually never even took place unlike in Latvia and Lithuania in 1939 1940 Under international law a war would have invalidated the Tartu Peace Treaty 96 As a lawyer he also had to understand that his decisions were not valid when forced by an occupying power 95 Legacy Edit Statue for Konstantin Pats in his birthplace Tahkuranna Erected in 1939 it was removed by the Soviets in 1940 The statue was restored in 1989 exactly fifty years after it was first erected Konstantin Pats was relatively successful in internal politics After adopting the constitution his party was in all the government cabinets except for Friedrich Karl Akel s and August Rei s cabinets and Jaan Tonisson s fourth cabinet This makes it 4 017 days 89 in the government of 4 497 in 1921 1933 Pats was himself the State Elder four times a total of 1 476 days 33 He never filled any other position in the government besides the head of government except for the additional minister portfolios in the provisional government Pats served as the chairman of the Farmers Assemblies party only unofficially and he was considered to be a bad partisan and often formed the opposition within the party Therefore he seldom took part of their official meetings Only in 1933 he was made honorary chairman of the party 97 Membership in the parliament 1917 1919 Estonian Provincial Assembly Maapaev 1919 1920 Estonian Constituent Assembly 1920 1923 I Riigikogu 1923 1926 II Riigikogu 1926 1929 III Riigikogu 1929 1932 IV Riigikogu 1932 1934 1937 V Riigikogu Pats s ideology went through major changes during his career During the 1905 Revolution he was considered a socialist as he advocated progressive ideas that were considered socialist at the time During his exile years he became more of a social liberal trying to use the best of both ideologies By the time Estonia became independent he had become a conservative and showed influences of statism during his authoritarian years 98 According to international law and the Estonian constitution Pats s actions were of no effect from the beginning of the occupation or at least from 21 June 1940 when Andrei Zhdanov forced him to appoint a puppet cabinet led by Johannes Vares Estonia s official position since the end of the Soviet era has been that the laws passed by the Vares cabinet and promulgated by Pats were void in any case as they had not ratified by the parliament s upper chamber Riiginoukogu as required by the constitution 99 The upper chamber was dissolved soon after the occupation and was never reconvened Legally Pats remained the de jure President until his death in 1956 His active duties went to the last pre occupation Prime Minister Juri Uluots who let Otto Tief form a government in 1944 before the Soviet reoccupation After Uluots died in Stockholm in 1945 presidential duties went to the oldest member of Tief s cabinet August Rei who formed the Estonian Government in Exile in 1953 The last Prime Minister in duties of the President Heinrich Mark handed over his credentials to the incoming President Lennart Georg Meri on 8 October 1992 100 A number of places and institutions in Estonia have been named after Konstantin Pats Kentmanni street in Tallinn was named after Konstantin Pats in 1939 1940 and 1941 1944 101 and Lossi street in Poltsamaa was named after him in 1936 1940 102 Konstantin Pats Boarding School of Tallinn was opened after Pats s own initiative for children with respiratory disorders 103 During Pats s presidency he had the creamy Staatsprasident Pats rose cultivar named after him and the flowers are being grown in the Kadriorg Park in Tallinn near the presidential palace 104 A museum of Konstantin Pats was set up in 1991 in the Tallinn Botanical Gardens where Pats s farmstead remains The museum still exists but the farmstead was returned to Pats s descendants in 1995 105 Pats has been portrayed in literature one of the best known is the satirical Memoirs of Ivan Orav by Andrus Kivirahk where Pats is portrayed as a true people s person who was beloved by the entire nation and who was a thoroughly good person In the puppet political satire show Pehmed ja karvased Pats is portrayed as a talking bust sculpture that is placed in the cellar of a governmental building together with other former presidents 106 Periods of Pats s life as a side character were also portrayed in the television series Tuulepealne maa 107 Remains Edit Konstantin and Helma Pats graves in Tallinn Metsakalmistu cemetery 2019 In 1988 Estonians Henn Latt and Valdur Timusk decided to search for Konstantin Pats s remains in Russia They reached Burashevo village 15 km from Kalinin now Tver where Pats had been a patient in the hospital They met his last doctor Ksenya Gusseva who described Pats s funeral in 1956 She said that Pats was buried like a president in a coffin unlike other deceased patients of the time On 22 June 1990 his grave was dug up and the remains were reburied in Tallinn Metsakalmistu cemetery on 21 October 1990 108 109 In 2011 a commemorative cross was placed in Burashevo village where Pats was once buried 110 Personal life Edit Konstantin Pats and his wife Helma In 1901 Konstantin Pats married Wilhelma Helma Ida Emilie Peedi b 1878 111 whom he had met in Parnu High School They had two sons Leo and Viktor Konstantin left his family for exile in 1905 and his second son was born while he still resided in Switzerland They were united when Konstantin moved to Ollila Finland His wife died of lung disease in 1910 while he was imprisoned in Saint Petersburg and Pats never remarried His children were raised by his wife s unmarried sister Johana Johanna Wilhelmine Alexsandra Peedi 5 Konstantin Pats also had at least one godson 112 Pats was seen as a kind person who was able to give good speeches and who had grown up in a rural area and therefore had a heart for the land He took a special interest in issues related to children He often donated money to large families and schools and organized events for students which he also took part in He was also known to take long walks in the morning in the Kadriorg park around the Presidential Palace and to get into conversations with park workers 5 Konstantin Pats had diabetes 90 In 1919 Pats rented organized and later bought a farmstead on the land detached from Vao Manor just outside Tallinn 113 He was later awarded a farmstead like many other participants of and contributors to the Estonian War of Independence His farmstead however was in Kloostrimetsa in a prime location just outside Tallinn 114 Currently located within the Tallinn Botanic Garden the farmstead has been returned to Pats s descendants 76 Descendants EditKonstantin s eldest son Leo Pats 1902 1988 managed to escape to Finland in 1939 He eventually moved on to Sweden where he died in 1988 115 Konstantin s second son Viktor Pats 1906 1952 died in Butyrka prison in Moscow on 4 March 1952 76 Viktor s sons Henn Enn 1936 1944 and Matti b 1933 were sent to an orphanage in 1941 but were soon separated They were united once a week until Henn died of starvation in Matti s arms in 1944 75 All living descendants of Konstantin Pats are the children and grandchildren of Matti Pats who returned from Russia with his mother Helgi Alice in 1946 116 Helgi Alice however was arrested again in 1950 and sentenced to 10 years in prison in Kazakh SSR and returned in 1955 78 Matti Pats has been the director of the Estonian Patent Office since 1991 he has also been a member of the Riigikogu and Tallinn city council He was even seen as a potential candidate for the 2001 Presidential election by the conservative wing of the Pro Patria Union 117 Awards Edit1920 Cross of Liberty I I 1920 Cross of Liberty III I 1921 Order of the Estonian Red Cross III 1935 Order of the Three Stars 1st Class Latvia 118 1926 Order of the Estonian Red Cross I I 1929 Order of the Cross of the Eagle I 1936 Order of Vasa Grand Cross Sweden 1938 Special sash of the Order of the National Coat of Arms 1938 Collar of the Order of the White Star 1938 Collar of the Order of the National Coat of ArmsBibliography EditPats Konstantin Karjaharm Toomas 1999 Eesti riik I Eesti mottelugu Tartu Ilmamaa ISBN 9985 878 26 4 Pats Konstantin Karjaharm Toomas 2001 Eesti riik II Eesti mottelugu Tartu Ilmamaa ISBN 9985 77 009 9 See also EditEstonian War of Independence Occupation of Baltic states Kaarel Eenpalu Johan Laidoner Jaan Teemant Antanas Smetona Karlis Ulmanis European interwar dictatorshipsNotes Edit Vares was prime minister under the illegal Soviet occupation and has therefore not been recognized as a Prime Minister of Estonia by the Government of Estonia Vares was prime minister under the illegal Soviet occupation and has therefore not been recognized as a Prime Minister of Estonia by the Government of Estonia Estonian pronunciation ˈkons tɑnʲ tin ˈpaetʲs References Edit Lees Elle 2006 Eesti Riigivanemad MTU Konstantin Patsi Muuseum p 3 Archived from the original on 24 December 2013 Retrieved 8 June 2013 Riigikogu juhatus Riigikogu a b c XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 383 a b c d Pimeduse katte all leidis teenekas mees viimase puhkepaiga abikaasa korval Parnu Postimees 4 March 2005 a b c d e f g h i j k l Kallas Vaino Eesti esimene president Konstantin Pats Archived 15 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Tahkuranna Jumalaema Uinumise apostliku oigeusu kirik Puhkaeestis ee a b c d e f Konstantin Pats President ee a b c Eesti ajalugu elulugudes 101 tahtsat eestlast Olion Tallinn 1997 pp 112 113 a b c XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 27 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 54 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 95 1917 Archived 17 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Meie parlament ja aeg XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 158 Arjakas Kullo 23 ja 24 veebruar 1918 kuidas iseseisvust kuulutati Archived 1 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Postimees 23 February 2008 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 168 Valitsus 24 02 1918 12 11 1918 Government of Estonia XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 175 Arjakas Kullo Konstantin Patsi vanglaelu Eesti Paevaleht 18 September 1999 Valitsus 12 11 1918 27 11 1918 Government of Estonia Parming Tonu 3 jaanuari hommikul 1920 loppes Postimees 18 January 1996 Konstantin Pats Eesti peaministrina Histrodamus ee retrieved 14 December 2015 Nohlen D amp Stover P 2010 Elections in Europe A data handbook ISBN 978 3 8329 5609 7 P 579 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 246 a b Kukk Kalev Otto Strandman manitseb tanaseid eelarvetegijaid Sirp 12 September 2008 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 298 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 319 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus 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2002 P 391 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 392 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 394 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 399 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 401 a b XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 390 a b XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 406 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 420 a b XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 434 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 449 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 465 Karjaharm Toomas 2002 Konstantin Patsi poliitilised ideed In Arjakas Kullo Velliste Anne eds Konstantin Patsi tegevusest artiklite kogumik Tallinn Museum of Konstantin Pats ISBN 9985 78 341 7 Archived from the original on 13 January 2014 Retrieved 7 June 2011 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 410 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 416 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 437 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 405 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 421 Alatalu Toomas Mis seal salata olen rahul et Postimees 29 October 1996 V Riigikogu 15 06 1932 02 10 1934 Meie parlament ja aeg retrieved 14 December 2015 Pats viis Riigikohtu vagisi ara Tallinna Postimees 14 January 2005 Tamm Boris Noored raputage endilt hirm tehnika ees Postimees 14 June 2001 Payne Stanley George 1995 A History of Fascism 1914 1945 ISBN 1 85728 595 6 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 423 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 432 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 440 a b Presidendi valimine labi Eesti ajaloo Postimees 22 September 2001 Lohmus Alo Pats sai presidendiks paari paevaga Postimees 9 October 2001 Uue pohiseaduse vastuvotmine Histrodamus ee retrieved 14 December 2015 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 pp 468 470 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 483 Tiitma Mikk Poliitiline eliit ja need teised Postimees 22 May 2001 XX sajandi kroonika II osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2004 P 28 XX sajandi kroonika II osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2004 P 15 XX sajandi kroonika II osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2004 P 16 a b Vahtre Lauri Etendus riigipoordest kulminatsioon Postimees 21 July 2005 Leonard Walter A 1940 The Charge in Estonia Leonard to the Secretary of State In Foreign relations of the United States diplomatic papers 1940 General United States Department of State 1940 Welles Sumner 1940 The Acting Secretary of State to the Charge in Estonia Leonard In Foreign relations of the United States diplomatic papers 1940 General United States Department of State 1940 a b c Moskva salatoimikud President Konstantin Pats ja tema pere Archived 24 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Eesti Ekspress 9 October 2011 a b c Kohus kuulutas Konstantin Patsi poja Viktori surnuks Eesti Paevaleht 13 March 2001 XX sajandi kroonika II osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2004 P 62 a b PIK PUU Museum of Occupations archived Udam Valter Matti Pats Tallinna linnapeaks Eesti Paevaleht 23 March 2001 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 240 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 349 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 389 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 418 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 378 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 417 XX sajandi kroonika I osa Eesti Entsuklopeediakirjastus Tallinn 2002 P 453 a b Sunge raamat 1930ndate Eestist Postimees 20 February 2003 a b c d Lohmus Alo Patsi ringkond laenas tuhjaks Vabadussoja jargse Eesti Panga Postimees 16 May 2003 Turtola Martti President Konstantin Pats Tanapaev 2003 P 187 a b Lohmus Alo Harra presidendi sunnipaev Postimees 21 February 2003 Hurt Vambola Eesti postmarkide kavandeid Eesti Filatelist no 32 1988 pp 41 49 Kaljulaid s disagreement with Pats memorial supported by EKRE ERR 21 January 2017 Retrieved 4 October 2022 President Kaljulaid not in favor of building monument to Konstantin Pats ERR 20 January 2017 Retrieved 4 October 2022 a b c d Lohmus Alo Ajaloolase vaitel muus Pats end 4000 dollari eest venelastele Postimees 6 April 2003 a b c d Adams Juri Tundmatu Konstantin Pats Eesti riik II Ilmamaa Tartu 2001 pp 27 28 a b c Virki Tarmo Soome ajaloolane President Pats oli kaastootaja ja pettur Postimees 10 October 2002 Laaman Eduard 1940 Konstantin Pats Poliitika ja riigimees Noor Eesti kirjastus Tartu P 176 Adams Juri Tundmatu Konstantin Pats Eesti riik II Ilmamaa Tartu 2001 P 11 13 14 VIDEO Ennetahtaegsed Riigivolikogu valimised 14 15 juulil 1940 Estonica Entsuklopeedia Eestist 14 December 2015 Katse taastada Eesti iseseisvus 1944 aastal Estonica Entsuklopeedia Eestist 14 December 2015 Hamilton Simon A Rambling Dictionary of Tallinn Street Names Archived 26 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Kull Helle 1993 Kilde Poltsamaast ja tema lahiumbruse ajaloost Kooli ajalugu Tallinna Konstantin Patsi Vabaohukool Aasmae Anneli Presidendililled kuldavad Ruutli roosiaeda Postimees 18 August 2003 Lees Elle MTU Konstantin Patsi Muuseumi arengulugu MTU Konstantin Patsi Muuseum Kes on pehmed ja karvased Ohtuleht 14 February 2008 Tuulepealne maa 2008 Imdb com Haav Margus Esimese presidendi viimne teekond kodumulda algas uskumatult Sakala 18 January 2011 Kuidas leiti K Patsi porm Videvik 11 November 2010 Kapov Jevgeni FOTOD Venemaal asetati Konstantin Patsi kunagise haua juurde malestusrist Delfi ee 10 June 2011 Wilhelma Ida Emilie Pats Peedi Geni com Saare Herold Seaduse taitmisel ja ees peavad Postimees 23 December 1995 Roosvali Kullike Valitsus pole arutanud Meri laenu kustutamist Postimees 11 October 2001 Pullerits Priit Tarbetu kingitus Postimees 15 October 2001 Joosep Elmar Sugupuu kui suudistuse alus Kultuur ja Elu 3 2007 Kallas Vaino Eesti esimene president Kool ee 29 October 2007 Ideon Argo Konservatiivid naeksid presidendina Matti Patsi Postimees 5 January 2001 Triju Zvaigznu ordenim 90 apbalvojuma dzimsana nebusanas un parvertibas LA LV in Latvian Retrieved 16 November 2020 Further reading EditTurtola Martti 2003 President Konstantin Pats Eesti ja Soome teed Tallinn Tanapaev ISBN 978 9985 62 117 2 External links EditKonstantin Pats on official site of the President of Estonia Video Newspaper clippings about Konstantin Pats in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Portal BiographyKonstantin Pats at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Konstantin Pats amp oldid 1143690727, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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