Gerhard Löwenthal Prize
The Gerhard Löwenthal Prize (German: Gerhard-Löwenthal-Preis) is an award for "free and conservative journalism" (freiheitlich-konservativen Journalismus) in Germany. Endowed by German "Foundation for Conservative Education and Research" (Förderstiftung Konservative Bildung und Forschung), it is awarded in cooperation with national-conservative newspaper Junge Freiheit and Ingeborg Löwenthal, widow of conservative journalist and Holocaust survivor Gerhard Löwenthal. Issued annually between 2004 and 2009, it has since been awarded only biannually.[1]
Recipients of the Gerhard Löwenthal Prize
Recipients of the prize have been:
- 2004 – Thorsten Hinz, writes for Preußische Allgemeine Zeitung and Sezession
- 2005 – Stefan Scheil, historian
- 2006 – Thomas Paulwitz, founder of the magazine Deutsche Sprachwelt[2]
- 2007 – Andreas Krause Landt, founder of the Landt Verlag
- 2008 – Ellen Kositza, author
- 2009 – André F. Lichtschlag, founder of the magazine eigentümlich frei
- 2011 – Michael Paulwitz, writes for Sezession
- 2013 – Birgit Kelle, journalist
- 2015 – Martin Voigt, freelancer
Recipients of the Gerhard Löwenthal honorary prize
A special honorary prize has been awarded to:
- 2004 – Herbert Fleissner
- 2005 – Caspar von Schrenck-Notzing
- 2006 – Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann
- 2007 – Wolf Jobst Siedler
- 2008 – Peter Scholl-Latour
- 2009 – Helmut Matthies
- 2011 – Ernst Nolte
- 2013 – Karl Feldmeyer
- 2015 – Heimo Schwilk
References
- ↑ "Gerhard-Löwenthal-Preis". Bibliothek des Konservatismus (in German). Förderstiftung Konservative Bildung und Forschung. Retrieved 25 March 2016.
- ↑ Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung: Lesesaal: Thomas Paulwitz
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