Leconte Prize

The Leconte Prize (French: Prix Leconte) is a prize created in 1886 by the French Academy of Sciences to recognize important discoveries in mathematics, physics, chemistry, natural history or medicine. In recent years the prize has been awarded in the specific categories of mathematics, physics, and biology. Scientists and mathematicians of all nationalities are eligible for the award. The value of the award in the late 19th and early 20th century was F50,000 (at the time equivalent to £2,000, or US$10,000), about five times as much as the annual salary of the average professor in France. The award was F22,000 in 1984, F20,000 in 2001, 3,000 in 2008, €2,500 in 2010, €2,000 in 2014, and €1,500 in 2019.[1][2][3][4][5]

The Leconte Prize was established with a donation from a businessman, Victor Eugene Leconte, to the academy. The donation specified that a F50,000 prize would be awarded every three years for outstanding past work, and that up to 1/8th of the interest earned by the fund each year could be awarded as encouragements, i.e., support for ongoing and future research. The academy did not award any large (F50,000) prizes between 1905 and 1916, but did award a total of F30,000 in encouragements during that period.[6]

Recipients

YearRecipientFieldAmountNotes
1889Paul Marie Eugène VieilleMechanics[7]
1891M. Douliot[8] Encouragement award.[6]
1892Philbert Maurice d'OcagneMathematics[9]
1892Jean Antoine VilleminMedicineF50,000Posthumously.[10]
1895William Ramsay and
John Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh
PhysicsF50,000[11][12]
1898no award[13]
1901Fernand FoureauExploration[14]
1904Prosper-René BlondlotPhysicsF50,000[15]
1907no award[16]
1909Walter RitzPhysicsF2,000[17] Encouragement award.[6]
1910Arthur Robert HinksAstronomy[18] Encouragement award.[6]
1911no award[19]
1912Charles TellierF8,000[20] Encouragement award.[6]
1912M. ForestF12,000[20] Encouragement award.[6]
1915Almroth WrightMedicine[21] Encouragement award.[6]
1921Georges ClaudeMechanicsF50,000[22]
1924André-Louis DebierneChemistry[23]
1927Alexandre YersinMedicine[24]
1930Élie CartanMathematics[25]
1936Julien ConstantinPosthumously. "For the whole of his work."[26]
1955Lucien BullMechanics[27]
1960Marguerite PereyPhysics[28]
1975Pierre BuserMedicine[29]
1978Marcel BergerMathematics[30]
1984Michel Duflo and Luc TartarMathematicsF22,000[31]
1993Georg MaretPhysics[32]
1996Sergiu KlainermanMathematics[33]
1997Raoul RanjevaBiology[34]
1998Philippe BianeMathematics[35]
1999Hervé NifeneckerPhysics[36]
2001Thierry GaudeBiologyF20,000[34][37]
2002Christian GérardMathematics[35]
2004Rémi MonassonPhysics[36]
2006Arnaud Cheritat and Xavier BuffMathematics[35]
2007Alain PuginBiology[34]
2008Marie-Noëlle BussacPhysics€3,000[36]
2010David LannesMathematics€2,500[35]
2011Olivier LoudetBiology€2,500[34]
2012Laurent Sanchez-PalenciaPhysics€2,500[38]
2013Zoé ChatzidakisMathematics[39]
2014Teva VernouxBiology€2,000[40]
2015Jean-Claude GarreauPhysics€2,000[41]
2017Nikolay TzvetkovMathematics[42]
2019Michaël Le BarsPhysics€1,500[43]
2020Phillipe Eyssidieux, Vincent Guedj
and Ahmed Zeriahi
Mathematics€1,500[44]
2021Emmanuelle BayerBiology€1,500[45]

See also

References

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  17. "Ritz, Walter" (in German). Archived from the original on January 15, 2013. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
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  21. "Wright, Sir Almroth (Edward), (10 Aug. 1861–30 April 1947), Forthergillian Gold Medal, Medical Society of London, 1908; Hungarian Prize, International Medical Congress, London, 1913; Leconte Prize, Académie des Sciences, 1915; Gold Medallist Royal Society of Medicine, 1920; Hon. Burgess of the City of Belfast; Principal of the Institute of Pathology and Research, St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, W; Professor of Experimental Pathology, University of London". Who Was Who. Oxford Index. December 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U233737. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
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  23. "The Medical Uses of Radium". Nature. 115 (2883): 174–175. 31 January 1925. doi:10.1038/115174a0. S2CID 4140660.
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  39. "The Foundation awarded researchers". Foundation Sciences Mathématiques de Paris. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  40. "Teva Vernous, Biologist, RDP". École Normale Supérieure de Lyon. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
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  42. "Our colleague Nikolay Tzvetkov received a prestigious international award". Institute of Mathematics and Informatics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
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  45. "The Académie des Sciences recognizes two Bordeaux scientists". Université de Bordeaux. 15 December 2021. Retrieved 31 January 2023.


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