Grahame Clark Medal
The Grahame Clark Medal is awarded by the British Academy every two years "for academic achievement involving recent contributions to the study of prehistoric archaeology". It was endowed in 1992 by Sir Grahame Clark, an eminent prehistorian and archaeologist, and first awarded in 1993.[1]
List of recipients
Source: British Academy
- 1993: Stuart Piggott
- 1995: John Coles
- 1997: J. D. Clark
- 1999: D. J. Mulvaney
- 2002: John Wymer
- 2004: Barrington W. Cunliffe
- 2006: Geoffrey J. Wainwright
- 2008: Paul Mellars
- 2010: Richard Bradley
- 2012: Charles Higham
- 2014: Joan Oates, "to recognise her reputation as one of the leading authorities on Mesopotamian prehistory as well as her fundamental contributions to our understanding of ancient Near Eastern Civilisation."[2]
- 2016: Kristian Kristiansen, "for his contribution to the study of the European Bronze Age, and the management, protection and interpretation of archaeological heritage."[3]
- 2018: Alison Sheridan, "for her outstanding research and wide-ranging contribution to the study of early prehistory."[4]
gollark: How do predicted grades actually work? Do they just hope schools won't manipulate them somehow?
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References
- "Grahame Clark Medal". The British Academy. Retrieved 11 October 2017.
- "Grahame Clark Medal 2014". Prizes and medals. The British Academy. 2014. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
- "Kristian Kristiansen received British Academy's Grahame Clark Medal". European Association of Archaeologists. Retrieved 11 October 2017.
- "Award-winning journalists, prehistorians and world-leading economists honoured with prestigious British Academy prizes and medals | British Academy". British Academy. Retrieved 2018-08-21.
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