Thirlwall Prize

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Since 1884, the Thirlwall Prize was instituted at Cambridge University, England, in the memory of Bishop Connop Thirlwall, and has been awarded during odd-numbered years, for the best essay about British history or literature for a subject with original research. It was instituted on the condition that a foundation a medal is awarded in alternate years for the best dissertation involving original historical research, together with a sum of money to defray the expenses of publication. From 1885, the Prince Consort Prize was awarded in alternate years.

Winners

Winners of the Thirlwall Prize include:

  • 1889 The Constitutional Experiments of the Commonwealth by E. Jenks
  • 1891 The Doctrine of Consideration in English Law by F. Aidan Hibbert
  • 1897 English Democratic Ideas in the Seventeenth Century by G.P. Gooch
  • 1905 The Second Athenian Confederacy by F.H. Marshall
  • 1907 Claudian as an Historical Authority by J. H. E. Crees[1]
  • 1913 To Bartolus of Sassoferrato: his Position in the History of Medieval Political Thought by C. N. S. Woolf
  • 1917 The Peoples Faith in the Time of Wyclif by Bernard Lord Manning
  • 1923 Etruria and Rome by R. A. L. Fell
  • 1927 The Union of Moldavia and Wallachia, 1859 by William Gordon East[2]
  • 1929 Scipio Africanus in the Second Punic War by Howard Hayes Scullard
  • 1931 Methodism & Politics, 1791-1851 by Ernest Richard Taylor
  • 1933 Aratos of Sicyon by F.W. Walbank
  • 1935 Senate and Provinces at the end of the Republic by J. Macdonald
  • 1937 The Theory of Religious Liberty in England, 1603-1639 by Thomas Lyon
  • 1939 Lord Liverpool and Liberal Toryism 1820-1827 by W. R. Brock
  • 1941 Bishop Reginald Pecock; a study in ecclesiastical history and thought by V. H. H. Green

References

  1. Claudian as an Historical Authority by J. H. E. Crees.
  2. W.G. East, The Union of Moldavia and Wallachia, 1859 - An Episode in Diplomatic History, Cambridge University Press (1929).

Sources

  • Endowments of the University of Cambridge, published in 1904, by John Willis Clark

External links

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