Schmiedeberg badge
The Schmiedeberg plaque is the highest honor awarded by the German Society for Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology (DGPT) and is awarded for “outstanding scientific achievements in the field of pharmacology , clinical pharmacology and toxicology ”. The award is named after Oswald Schmiedeberg , who together with his academic teacher Rudolf Buchheim established pharmacology as an independent scientific discipline.
The Schmiedeberg plaque has been awarded without a fixed rhythm since 1956 by the DGPT or the German Pharmacological Society as its forerunner organization. The DGPT general assembly is responsible for the award at the suggestion of the presidium of the society.
Award winners
- 2012: Karsten Schrör (Düsseldorf) and Karl Walter Bock (Tübingen)
- 2010: Erich Muscholl (Mainz)
- 2008: Michel Eichelbaum (Stuttgart and Tübingen)
- 2002: Roman Muschaweck (Frankfurt am Main), Wulf Vater (Leverkusen) and Ernst Mutschler (Frankfurt am Main)
- 2000: Fritz Markwardt (Erfurt)
- 1998: Ullrich Trendelenburg (Tübingen)
- 1995: Norbert Brock (Bielefeld) and Fred Lembeck (Graz)
- 1994: Oleh Hornykiewicz (Vienna)
- 1987: Harald Reuter (Bern) and Albrecht Fleckenstein (Freiburg)
- 1985: Herbert Remmer (Tübingen)
- 1982: Gustav Kuschinsky (Mainz)
- 1981: Hans Herken (Berlin)
- 1980: Everhardus Ariëns (Nijmwegen)
- 1978: Julius Axelrod (Bethesda; Nobel Prize 1970)
- 1977: Heinz Otto Schild (London) and Walther Wilbrandt (Bern)
- 1976: Hans Walter Kosterlitz (Aberdeen)
- 1974: Marthe Vogt (Cambridge), Friedrich Hartmut Dost (Gießen) and Edith Bülbring (Oxford)
- 1972: Hermann Blaschko (Oxford)
- 1969: Werner Schulemann (Bonn) and Bernard B. Brodie (Bethesda)
- 1968: Wilhelm Siegmund Feldberg (London) and Ulf von Euler (Stockholm; Nobel Prize 1970)
- 1967: Ernest Basil Verney (Cambridge) and Joshua Harold Burn (Oxford)
- 1965: Otto Schaumann (Innsbruck)
- 1964: Otto Krayer (Boston) and Peter Holtz (Frankfurt am Main)
- 1962: Carl Frederic Schmidt (Philadelphia), Göran Liljestrand (Stockholm), Corneille Heymans (Gent; Nobel Prize 1938) and Sir Henry Dale (London; Nobel Prize 1936)
- 1957: Ernst Peter Pick (New York) and Otto Loewi (New York; Nobel Prize 1936)
- 1956: Wolfgang Heubner (Berlin)
Web links
- Scientific prizes of the DGPT - Schmiedeberg plaque List of the award winners