Sir Israel Gollancz Prize
Sir Israel Gollancz Prize is awarded biannually by the British Academy in honor of Israel Gollancz, a founder member and its first secretary, since 1924. Originally named "Biennial Prize for English Literature" and renamed after Gollancz's death in 1930, the award was established on the initiative of Frida Mond. It is awarded to scholars of Old and Early English language and literature and history of the English language.[1]
Winners
- 1925 Professor Joseph Wright
- 1927 Professor R. W. Chambers
- 1929 Professor Allen Mawer
- 1931 Professor H. C. K. Wyld
- 1933 Dr C. T. Onions
- 1935 Sir W. A. Craigie
- 1937 C. S. Lewis
- 1939 Professor J. M. Manly
- 1941 Professor Karl Young
- 1943 – 50 No award
- 1951 Dorothy Whitelock
- 1953 Kenneth Sisam
- 1955 Professor Bruce Dickins
- 1957 Florence Harmer
- 1959 Neil Ker
- 1963 George Kane
- 1965 Albert Hugh Smith
- 1971 Phyllis Hodgson
- 1985 Anne Hudson
- 1991 Anne Hudson
- 1995: H. Leith Spencer
- 1997: Fred Robinson
- 1999: George Kane
- 2001: Malcolm Godden and Peter Clemoes
- 2003: Robert Lewis
- 2005: Patrick P. O'Neill
- 2007: William James Simpson
- 2009: Michael Lapidge
- 2011: Jill Mann
- 2013: Leslie Lockett
References
- ↑ "Sir Israel Gollancz Prize". British Academy. Retrieved 20 September 2013.
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