Herder Prize

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Herder Prize, established in 1963 and named for Johann Gottfried von Herder, is a prestigious international prize, dedicated to the promotion of scientific, art and literature relations, and presented to scholars and artists from Central and Southeastern Europe whose life and work have improved the cultural understanding of European countries and their peaceful interrelations.

The jury is composed of German and Austrian universities. Financing for the Herder Award (which raises to 15,000 €) is ensured by the Alfred Töpfer Foundation in Hamburg. The awards are traditionally presented at the University of Vienna each year and handed over by the President of Austria. The awarded has also the right to make a nomination for an one-year Herder scholarship (900-1000 € montly) at an Austrian university.

In 2007, the Herder Prize will merge with another fund creating a new European culture prize worthing 75,000 € and designed to encourage young European artists.

[edit] List of recipients

1965 Tudor Arghezi, Romanian writer
László Németh, Hungarian writer
1966 Ján Cikker, Slovak composer
1967 Witold Lutosławski, Polish Composer
Mihai Pop, Romanian ethnologist
1968 Lajos Vayer
1969 Pancho Vladigerov, Bulgarian composer, pedagogue, and pianist
1970 Gyula Illyés, Hungarian poet and novelist
1971 Zaharia Stancu, Romanian writer
1972 Gyula Ortutay, Hungarian ethnographer
Virgil Vătăşianu, Romanian art historian
1973 Zbigniew Herbert, Polish poet, essayist and moralist
1975 Nichita Stănescu, Romanian poet
1976 Dezső Keresztury, Hungarian writer, poet
1977 Eugen Barbu, Romanian novelist, playwright and journalist
Krzysztof Penderecki, Polish composer
1978 Béla Gunda, Hungarian ethnographer
1979 Ferenc Farkas, Hungarian composer
1980 Emil Condurachi, Romanian academician, historian
1981 Sándor Csoóri, Hungarian poet, writer
1982 Ana Blandiana, Romanian poet, essayist, and political figure
Imre Varga, Hungarian sculptor
1983 Jozef Jankovič, Slovak sculptor
György Konrád, Hungarian novelist and essayist (1984?)
Adrian Marino, Romanian literary critic
Stoimen Stoilov, Bulgarian artist
1984 Constantin Lucaci, Romanian sculptor
1985 Adrian Marino, Romanian literary critic, historian and theoretician
1986 Tekla Dömötör
Anatol Vieru, Romanian composer
1987 József Ujfalussy, Hungarian aesthete
1988 Ana Blandiana, Romanian poet
Constantin Noica, Romanian philosopher and essayist
1990 András Vizkelety, Hungarian philologist
1991 Marin Sorescu, Romanian poet, playwright, and novelist
Stoimen Stoilov, Bulgarian artist
1994 Sándor Kányádi, Hungarian poet (1995?)
Zigmas Zinkevičius, Lithuanian linguist and historian
1995 Wisława Szymborska, Polish poet, essayist and translator
1996 Konstantin Iliev, Bulgarian dramatist
1997 Ferenc Glatz, Hungarian academician, professor
1998 Imre Bak, Hungarian artist
Andrei Corbea Hoişie, Romanian philologist
1999 Mircea Dinescu, Romanian poet, editor and dissident
István Fried
2000 Imre Kertész, Hungarian writer
Milan Kundera, Czech writer
2001 Janez Bernik, Slovenian painter
János Böhönyey, Hungarian architect
Marek Kopelent, Czech composer
2002 Péter Esterházy, Hungarian writer
2003 Drago Jančar, Slovenian novelist and dramatist
Károly Manherz, Hungarian germanist, linguist, professor
Ana Maria Zahariade, Romanian architect
2004 Éva Pócs, Hungarian ethnographer
2005 Károly Klimó, Hungarian artist
Hanna Krall, Polish journalist and writer
Primoz Kuret, Slovenian historian and musicologist
Jir¡ í Kuthan
Andrei Marga, Romanian professor, philosopher
Eimuntas Nekrošius, Lithuanian theater director
Krešimir Nemec, Croatian literary critic
2006 Wlodzimierz Borodziej, Polish historian
Nicos Hadzinikolau
Gabriela Kilianova, Slovak ethnologist
Ene Mihkelson, Estonian writer
Vojteh Ravnikar, Slovenian architect, professor

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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