Imperial Prize of the Japan Academy
The Imperial Prize of the Japan Academy (恩賜賞・日本学士院賞) was a prestigious honor conferred by the Imperial Academy from 1911 through 1945. The award was presented to non-members in recognition of their academic theses, books, and achievements.
In the post-war period, the Imperial Academy was renamed the Japan Academy;[1] and the name of this prize was changed accordingly. The substantially similar Japan Academy Prize was awarded after this 1947 evolution.
Laureates
- 2011 — Akira Satake, Hideaki Miyata (101st)[2]
- 2010 — Akira Omote, Shinya Yamanaka (100th)[3]
- 2009 — Tetumi Murakami, Toru Eguchi (99th)[3]
- 2008 — Keiji Morokuma (98th)[3]
- 2007 — Senzo Hidemura, Shizuo Akira (97th)[3]
- 2006 — Shuh Narumiya (96th)[3]
- 2005 — Kazuya Kato (95th)[3]
- 2004 — Chikahi Suma, Takeshi Yasumoto (94th)[3]
- 2003 — Mitsuhiro Yanagida (93rd)[3]
- 2002 — Takahiro Fujimoto, Sumio Iijima (92nd)[3]
- 2001 — Fumio Hayashi, Makoto Asashima (91st)[3]
- 2000 — Tsugitaka Sato, Shigekazu Nagata (90th)[4]
- 1999 — Susumu Fuma, Yoshito Kishi (89th)[4]
- 1998 — Toshio Yanagida (88th)[4]
- 1997 — Shigetada Nakanishi (87th)[4]
- 1996 — Tasuku Honjo (86th)[4]
- 1995 — Toru Mineya, Yoshio Fukao (85th)[4]
- 1994 — Makoto Kumada, Hideki Sakurai (84th)[4]
- 1993 — Issei Tanaka, Yasuo Tanaka (astronomer) (83rd)[4]
- 1992 — Chushichi Tsuzuki, Tadamitsu Kishimoto (82nd)[4]
- 1991 — Yoshinori Kobayashi, Akira Tonomura (81st)[4]
- 1990 — Koji Nakanishi (80th)[5]
- 1989 — Tomi Saeki, Yorio Hinuma (79th)[5]
- 1988 — Susumu Nishimura (78th)[5]
- 1987 — Toshio Fukuyama, Toshimitsu Yamazaki (77th)[5]
- 1986 — Masao Ito (76th)[5]
- 1985 — Ryo Sato (75th)[5]
- 1984 — Seizen Nakasone, Gakuzo Tamura (74th)[5]
- 1983 — Teruaki Mukaiyama (73rd)[5]
- 1982 — Kokiti Hara, Shizuo Kakutani (72nd)[5]
- 1981 — Yasuiti Nagano (71st)[5]
- 1980 — Yoshio Okada (70th)[6]
- 1979 — Yoshihide Kozai (69th)[6]
- 1978 — Kiyoshi Itō (68th)[6]
- 1977 — Shinji Takahashi (67th)[6]
- 1976 — Takashi Sugimura (66th)[6]
- 1975 — Jikido Takasaki, Minoru Oda (65th)[6]
- 1974 — Tsugio Mikami, Kimishige Ishizaka (64th)[6]
- 1973 — Takuichi Takeshima, Jun Kondo (63rd)[6]
- 1972 — Tadashi Matsushita, Setsuro Ebashi (62nd)[6]
- 1971 — Mataji Miyamoto, Chushiro Hayashi (61st)[6]
- 1970 — Hidetaka Nakamura, Seizo Okamura (60th)[7]
- 1969 — Ryogo Kubo (59th)[7]
- 1968 — Tatsuo Nishida (58th)[7]
- 1967 — Kōsaku Yosida (57th)[7]
- 1966 — Egaku Mayeda (56th)[7]
- 1965 — Noriyuki Kojima (55th)[7]
- 1964 — Kiyoshi Mutō (54th)[7]
- 1963 — Takeo NAGAMIYA (53rd)[7]
- 1962 — Tomoichi Sasabuchi (52nd)[7]
- 1961 — Shigeo Okinaka (51st)[7]
- 1960 — Osamu Takata, Takuji Ito, Kazuo Yamasaki, Aki Uyeno, Taka Yanagisawa, Tsugio Miya (50th)[8]
- 1959 — Isao Imai (physicist) (49th)[8]
- 1958 — Ryozo Niizeki (48th)[8]
- 1957 — Hajime Nakamura (47th)[8]
- 1956 — Masuzo Shikata, Isamu Tachi (46th)[8]
- 1955 — Yoshio Fujita (45th)[8]
- 1954 — Jitsuzo Tamura, Yukio Kobayashi (44th)[8]
- 1953 — Tomizo Yoshida (43rd)[8]
- 1952 — Seiichi Mizuno, Toshio Nagahiro (42nd)[8]
- 1951 — Yoshiyuki Toyama (41st)[8]
- 1950 — Shoichi Sakata (40th)[9]
- 1949 — Kakuji Goto (39th)[9]
- 1948 — Saburo Ienaga (38th)[9]
- 1947 — Takeo Matsumura (37th)[9]
- 1946 — Hakaru Masumoto (36th)[9]
- 1945 — Tokuhichi Mishima, Kyôji Funada, Takahiro Okuno (35th)[9]
- 1944 — Tomosaburo Ogata (34th)[9]
- 1943 — Junpei Shinobu, Tanemoto Furuhata, Hitoshi Kihara (33rd)[9]
- 1942 — Enku Uno (32nd)[9]
- 1941 — Eiichi Matsumoto, Kinjiro Okabe, Yas Kuno (31st)[9]
- 1940 — Asaji Nose, Hideki Yukawa, Juro Horiuti (30th)[10]
- 1939 — Ken Ishikawa, Ken Kure (29th)[10]
- 1938 — San-ichiro Mizushima (28th)[10]
- 1937 — Shinkichi Horiba, Yasujiro Niwa (27th)[10]
- 1936 — Hisayosi Ogawa, Takaoki Sasaki, Tomizo Yoshida (26th)[10]
- 1935 — Shimpei Ogura, Shinsho Hanayama (25th)[10]
- 1934 — Noboru Niida, Seitaro Tsuboi (24th)[10]
- 1933 — Ziro Tuzi, Bunsuke Suzuki (23rd)[10]
- 1932 — Kyōsuke Kindaichi, Kiyoo Wadati (22nd)[10]
- 1931 — Katsutada Sezawa (21st)[10]
- 1930 — Buntaro Adachi (20th)[11]
- 1929 — Toshi Shida (19th)[11]
- 1928 — Masao Kambe, Sōichi Kakeya (18th)[11]
- 1927 — Shigeru Kato, Yuji Shibata (17th)[11]
- 1926 — Yorisuke Numata, Yoshiaki Ozawa (16th)[11]
- 1925 — Keiki Yabuki, Nagaho Mononobe (15th)[11]
- 1924 — Kuniji Yashiro, Takaoki Sasaki (14th)[11]
- 1923 — Iichiro Tokutomi, Shigematsu Kakimura, Yasuhiko Aasahina, Suekichi Kinoshita (13th)[11]
- 1922 — Toshio Takamine, Usaburo Yishida (12th)[11]
- 1921 — Zennosuke Tsuji, Gennosuke Fuse (11th)[11]
- 1920 — Kaneyuki Miura, Mitsumaru Tsujimoto (10th)[12]
- 1919 — Jun Ishihara (9th)[12]
- 1918 — Hidematsu Wada, Taiken Kimura, Keita Shibata (8th)[12]
- 1917 — Torahiko Terada, Sasaki Nobutsuna (7th)[12]
- 1916 — Toru Oya, Taisuke Hayashi, Ryokichi Inada, Yasushi Ido (6th)[12]
- 1915 — Hideyo Noguchi (5th)[13]
- 1914 — Sunao Tawara (4th)[12]
- 1913 — Ryosuke Muraoka, Kumakatsu Kosaka (3rd)[12]
- 1912 — Nagao Ariga, Yu Fujikawa, Sakugoro Hirase, Seiichiro Ikeno (2nd)[12]
- 1911 — Hisashi Kimura (1st)[12]
Notes
- ↑ Japan Academy: About the Academy
- ↑ Japan Academy, 101st 20 June 2011; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 Japan Academy, 91st-100th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 Japan Academy, 81st-90th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.9 Japan Academy, 71st-80th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 6.9 Japan Academy, 61st-70th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 7.9 Japan Academy, 51st-60th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 8.8 8.9 Japan Academy, 41st-50th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.7 9.8 9.9 Japan Academy, 31st-40th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 10.7 10.8 10.9 Japan Academy, 21st-30th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 11.6 11.7 11.8 11.9 Japan Academy, 11th-20th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 12.7 12.8 Japan Academy, 1st-10th; retrieved 2011-08-15
- ↑ Kita, Atsushi. (2005). Dr. Noguchi's Journey: A Life of Medical Search and Discovery, p. 186; Japan Academy, 5 July 1915; retrieved 2011-08-15
References
- Kita, Atsushi. (2005). Dr. Noguchi's Journey: A Life of Medical Search and Discovery (tr., Peter Durfee). Tokyo: Kodansha. 10-ISBN 4-7700-2355-3; 13-ISBN 978-4-7700-2355-1