Ants Piip VR III/1 (also Anton or Hans Piip; in Tuhalaane, Kreis Fellin â 1 October 1942 in Nyrobsky camp, Perm Oblast, Russian SFSR) was an Estonian lawyer, diplomat and politician. Piip was the 1st Head of State of Estonia and the 5th Prime Minister of Estonia. Piip played a key role in internationalising the independence aspirations of Estonia during the Paris Peace Conference following World War I.
Son of a small independent farmer, Piip took his high school exams at the Kuressaare State High School and studied at Teachers' Seminar in Kuldëga (formerly Goldingen), now in Latvia. In 1903âÂÂ1905, he was a parish clerk and schoolteacher at Alà «ksne, also a teacher in the Emperor Nikolai Eastern Orthodox Parish School in Kuressaare in 1905âÂÂ1906, in the Kuressaare Marine School in 1906âÂÂ1912, and in the Janson Merchant School in Saint Petersburg in 1913âÂÂ1915. He studied at the law department of the Saint Petersburg University in 1908âÂÂ1913 and received a scientific scholarship from the Saint Petersburg University in 1913âÂÂ1916, during that time he worked in the Russian Justice and Interior Ministries. Piip took additional courses in the Berlin University in 1912.
Piip was a member of the Estonian Province Assembly (), and later a member of the Constituent Assembly (Asutav Kogu), and after that, of the Riigikogu. In 1917âÂÂ1919, Piip was a member of the Estonian Foreign Mission in Saint Petersburg and in London, he participated in the Paris Peace Conference. In 1919 he was Deputy to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, 1919âÂÂ1920 Member of the Estonian delegation in the Tartu peace negotiations between Estonia and the Russian SFSR. In 1919âÂÂ1940 he was Professor of International Law in Tartu University. In 1920, he was the diplomatic representative the Republic of Estonia in Great Britain. 1920âÂÂ1921, while Head of State, Piip was also the Minister of War. He held position of Minister of Foreign Affairs five times, also he was in 1923âÂÂ1925 the Envoy of Estonia to the United States of America. During 1938âÂÂ1940, Piip was also member of the Riigivolikogu (first chamber of the Riigikogu).
Piip was arrested by the NKVD on 30 June 1941 and he died in a Soviet prison camp NyrobLag the next year.
Ants Piip, in 1934 in Riga, emphasised the importance of regional co-operation in preserving Baltic independence: