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- This article is about the culture prize "The Sonning Prize". For the music prize - see Léonie Sonning Music Prize
The Sonning Prize (Danish: "Sonningprisen") is awarded biennially for outstanding contributions to European culture. A committee headed by the rector of the University of Copenhagen decides among candidates proposed by European universities. The prize amounts to 1 mio DKK (~135,000 €). The prize award ceremony is held on April 19 (Sonning's birthday) at the University of Copenhagen. The prize was established by will of the Danish editor and author Carl Johan Sonning (1879-1937). It was first awarded in 1950 (extraordinarily) and subsequently every second year from 1959.
[edit] Sonning Prize laureates
- 2006 Ágnes Heller, philosophy
- 2004 Mona Hatoum, creative arts
- 2002 Mary Robinson, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
- 2000 Eugenio Barba, theatre
- 1998 Jørn Utzon, architecture
- 1996 Günter Grass, author
- 1994 Krzysztof Kieślowski, film
- 1991 Václav Havel, author and statesman
- 1989 Ingmar Bergman, theatre and film
- 1987 Jürgen Habermas, philosophy
- 1985 William Heinesen, author
- 1983 Simone de Beauvoir, author
- 1981 Dario Fo, theatre
- 1979 Hermann Gmeiner, founder of the SOS Children's Villages
- 1977 Arne Næss, philosophy
- 1975 Hannah Arendt, politology
- 1973 Karl Popper, philosophy
- 1971 Danilo Dolci, social worker
- 1970 Max Tau, author
- 1969 Halldór Laxness, author
- 1968 Arthur Koestler, author
- 1967 Willem A. Visser't Hooft, theology
- 1966 Sir Laurence Olivier, actor
- 1965 Richard Nikolaus Graf Coudenhove-Kalergi, author and statesman
- 1964 Dominique Pire, theology
- 1963 Karl Barth, theology
- 1962 Alvar Aalto, architecture
- 1961 Niels Bohr, physics
- 1960 Bertrand Russell, philosophy
- 1959 Albert Schweitzer, philosophy
- 1950 Sir Winston Churchill, author and statesman
[edit] See also
[edit] References
Sonning Prize at the University of Copenhagen
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