Yorke Prize
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The Yorke Prize is awarded annually by the Faculty of Law at the University of Cambridge for an essay of between 30,000 and 100,000 words on a legal subject, including the history, analysis, administration and reform of law.[1][2]
The prize, awarded from the Yorke Fund, is open to any graduate of, or any person who is or has been registered as a graduate student of, the University.
Endowment
The Yorke Fund was endowed in 1873 by the will of Edmund Yorke[3] (b. 8 February 1787, d.29 November 1871), alumnus of Rugby School, scholar and later Fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge and barrister of Lincoln's Inn, London.[4]
Yorke Prize Winners
Winners of the Yorke Prize have included:
- Courtney Stanhope Kenny, 1877, 1878, 1879
- Perceval Maitland Laurence, 1878
- Richard Cockburn Maclaurin, 1898
- Richard Turner, 1923
- Norman Bentwich
- Norman St John-Stevas (Baron St John of Fawsley), 1957
- John Guy
- John H. Langbein
- Sir John Baker, 1975
- Paul McHugh, 1988
- Neil Jones
References
- ↑ Cambridge University Faculty of Law Funding Opportunities
- ↑ Cambridge University Reporter 11 November 2005
- ↑ Cambridge University Faculty of Law: A Tradition of Benefaction
- ↑ Alumni of the University of Cambridge
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