- Source: Cothenius Medal
Cothenius Medal is a medal awarded by the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina (known as the Leopoldina) for outstanding scientific achievement during the life of the awardee. The medal was created to honour Christian Andreas Cothenius, who was the personal physician to Frederick the Great. In 1743, Cothenius became a fellow of the Leopoldina, later president of the learned society that had been created by Emperor Leopold I. When Cothenius died, he left a sum of money in his will to the society with the condition that the interest on the money should be used to award a gold medal, every two years by answering a question in medicine whereby some new truth could be established. Up until 1864, the award came with a prize but was then converted into an award for the promotion of research over the whole period of a person's life. Each medal bears the Latin inscription "Praemium virtutis salutem mortalium provehentibus sancitum" (Created in recognition of the ability of those who promote the good of mortals).
Cothenius Medal awardees, 1959–2023
Cothenius Medal awardees, 1864–1953
Cothenius Medal awardees, 1792–1861
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Emil Fischer
- Hans Spemann
- Emil Abderhalden
- Richard Johann Kuhn
- Sven Hedin
- Eugen Fischer
- Cothenius Medal
- David Hilbert
- Cothenius Medal awardees, 1792–1861
- Cothenius Medal awardees, 1864–1953
- Pyotr Kapitsa
- Adolf Eugen Fick
- Ivan Pavlov
- Bert Hölldobler
- Pavel Alexandrov
- Erich von Tschermak