Ausonius Prize

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Ausonius Prize is an ancient science award .

The Ausonius Prize has been awarded by the University of Trier since 1998 in recognition of an outstanding academic work or an outstanding complete work in the field of classical philology or ancient history . It is named after the late antique poet Ausonius , who is best known for his work Mosella .

Award winners

The topic of the lecture given by the award winner at the award ceremony is also given.

  • 1998: Hellmut Flashar ("Medicine and Ethics in Antiquity")
  • 1999: Peter Brown ("Poverty and the social model in late antiquity. Origin and development of episcopal power")
  • 2000: Clemens Zintzen ("On the Renaissance Image of Man")
  • 2001: Tanja Scheer ("From Pausanias to Egeria. Pagan and Christian pilgrims in the Roman Empire")
  • 2002: Georg Danek ("The Myth of the Trojan War. Remarks by a Comparatist")
  • 2003: Alexander Demandt ("The Philosophy of Work")
  • 2004: Peter Stotz ("Learning from the Gentiles: Methods of Defense and Appropriation of Pagan Traditions in Christianity")
  • 2005: Gustav Adolf Lehmann ("On the criticism of the" classical "democracy of Athens")
  • 2006: Philip van der Eijk ("Body, soul, spirit - views on psychosomatic interactions in Greek philosophical and medical thought")
  • 2007: Manfred Clauss ("Christians - Citizens of Another World")
  • 2008: Kathleen M. Coleman ("Gladiators - Myth and Reality")
  • 2009: Rainer Wiegels ("Germania has been defeated for so long! - Rome, a failed winner?")
  • 2010: Glenn W. Most ("Four Ways to Misunderstand the Medea of ​​Euripides")
  • 2011: Werner Eck ("Participation in power. Imperial freedmen in the society of the Imperium Romanum")
  • 2012: Wilfried Stroh ("Philosophy and Rhetoric in Ancient Youth Education")
  • 2013: Beat Näf ("City cartridge - an ancient invention?")
  • 2014: Joachim Latacz ("Questions to Homer's Achilles")
  • 2015: Helmut Halfmann ("The Greeks among foreign masters. The search for identity from antiquity to the present")
  • 2016: Wolfram Ax ("Asterix redivivus? Comments on Volume 35 'Asterix at the Picts' and Volume 36 'The Papyrus of Caesar'")
  • 2017: Hans-Joachim Gehrke ("Greek Myths as the History of the Greeks")
  • 2018: Christof Rapp ("Karl Marx and the Philosophy of Antiquity")
  • 2019: Peter Funke ("... stronger than the vengeance of the gods. Violence and reconciliation in classical Athens")

Web links