Eduard Anthes Prize

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The Eduard Anthes Prize for outstanding scientific work dealing with archaeological topics from the low mountain range is awarded by the Association of Friends of Antiquity in the Darmstadt District. V. in cooperation with the Hessian Ministry for Science and Art and the Hesse ARCHAEOLOGY at the State Office for Monument Preservation Hesse every two years. The prize was donated in 1984 and is named after the prehistorian Eduard Anthes (1859–1922), who worked as a monument conservationist in Hessen-Darmstadt from 1909. The prize money (as of 2019) is 7500 euros.

Award winners

  • 1985: Egon Schallmayer for "The Roman Dieburg and its grave fields"
  • 1987: Holger Göldner for "Studies on Rhine and Moselle Franconian Bow Brooches"
  • 1989: Karin Terberger for "The Lahntal-Palaeolithic"
  • 1991: Ronald Heynowski for "Iron Age costume jewelry in the low mountain range between the Rhine and Thuringian basins"
  • 1993: Svend Hansen for "Studies on the metal dumping during the older urn field times between the Rhône Valley and the Carpathian Basin"
  • 1995: Bernd Steidl for "The Wetterau from 3rd to 5th Century AD"
  • 1997: Felix Teichner for "The Migration Period settlement with burial ground near Kahl am Main"
  • 1999: Ursula Eisenhauer for "Investigations into the settlement and cultural history of the Middle Neolithic in the Wetterau"
  • 2001: Ulrike Ehmig for "The Roman amphorae from Mainz"
  • 2003: Kirsten Gebhard for "The Prehistoric Settlement of the Groß-Gerau District - A Study of the Settlement History of the Hessian Ried"
  • 2005: Stefan Hesse for "The medieval settlement Vriemeensen in the context of the desert research in southern Lower Saxony with special consideration of the problem of small nobility"
  • 2007: Markus Helfert for “The pottery in the Roman vicus of Groß-Gerau 'Auf Esch'. Archaeological archaeometric investigations into ceramic production in the fort vicus ”and
    0000:Carsten Wenzel for“ The Roman vicus of Groß-Gerau 'Auf Esch'. The building findings of the fort vicus and the settlement from the 1st to 3rd centuries. "
  • 2009: Kerstin Schierhold for “Studies on Hessian-Westphalian megalithics. Research status and perspectives taking into account the European context "(Dissertation at the Department of Prehistory and Protohistoric Archeology at the Westphalian Wilhelms University of Münster, 2008, with Albrecht Jockenhövel )
  • 2012: David Hissnauer for "A workshop area of ​​the 3rd century AD of the Roman sigillata pottery of Rheinzabern" (dissertation at the Archaeological Institute of the University of Cologne 2011 with Thomas Fischer )
  • 2014: Eveline Saal for “The Merovingian cemetery in Rhens, Mayen-Koblenz district. Contributions to the early medieval chronology and settlement history on the Middle Rhine and Lower Moselle "(Dissertation at the Philipps University of Marburg 2012 with Horst Wolfgang Böhme )
  • 2015: Petra Eisenach for "Late Iron Age to Early Imperial Age Settlement Traces on the Amöneburg "
  • 2017: Eike Henning Michl for “Castellum, Curia, Palatium ?! The medieval settlement history of a central Franconian town on the Kapellberg near Gerolzhofen "in the subject of archeology of the Middle Ages and modern times at the University of Bamberg (supervisor Ingolf Ericsson)
  • 2019: Clarissa Agricola for her dissertation "The value of something special - Roman and Germanic Terra Nigra of the 3rd to 5th centuries."

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Thomas Becker: 17th award of the Eduard Anthes Prize . In: Monument Preservation and Cultural History 2/2017, p. 38 f.
  2. Awarding of the 18th Eduard Anthes Prize . In: Archäologie-Online , May 10, 2019. Retrieved May 11, 2019.