Austrian Decoration for Science and Art
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Austrian Decoration for Science and Art | |
---|---|
Type | State decoration |
Awarded for | "...superior creative and commendable services in the areas of the sciences or the arts."[1] |
Country | Republic of Austria |
Eligibility | Austrian and foreign citizens[1] |
Motto | Litteris et Artibus |
Status | Currently awarded |
Established | 1955[1] |
Decoration for Science and Art Cross of Honour for Science and Art, First Class Cross of Honour for Science and Art | |
Precedence | |
Next (higher) | Varies by grade[1] |
Next (lower) | Varies by grade[1] |
The Austrian Decoration for Science and Art (German: Österreichisches Ehrenzeichen für Wissenschaft und Kunst) is a state decoration of the Republic of Austria and forms part of the Austrian national honours system.
History
[edit]The "Austrian Decoration for Science and Art" was established by the National Council as an honour for scientific or artistic achievements by Federal Law of May 1955 (Federal Law Gazette No. 96/1955 as amended BGBl I No 128/2001). At the same time, the National Council also established the "Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art", which is awarded as "Cross of Honour, First Class" (German: Ehrenkreuz 1. Klasse) and "Cross of Honour" (German: Ehrenkreuz). While not technically counted as lower classes of the Decoration for Science and Art, these crosses are nevertheless affiliated with it.
Divisions
[edit]Decoration for Science and Art
[edit]The number of living recipients of the Decoration for Science and Art is limited to a maximum of 72 at any one time (36 recipients for science and 36 for arts). In each of these two groups there are 18 Austrian citizens and 18 foreign nationals.
Cross of Honour for Science and Art, First Class
[edit]There are no limits on the number of recipients.
Cross of Honour for Science and Art
[edit]There are no limits on the number of recipients.
Precedence
[edit]Grade | Preceding | Following |
---|---|---|
Decoration for Science and Art | Grand Decoration of Honour in Silver with Star for Services to the Republic of Austria | Grand Decoration of Honour in Gold for Services to the Republic of Austria |
Cross of Honour for Science and Art 1st Class | Military Merit Decoration | Grand Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria |
Cross of Honour for Science and Art | Grand Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria | Decoration of Honour in Gold for Services to the Republic of Austria |
Recipients
[edit]Decoration for Science and Art
[edit]- 1957: Clemens Holzmeister, architect
- 1959: Max Mell, writer
- 1959: Alfred Verdross, jurist
- 1960: O. W. Fischer, actor
- 1961: Herbert von Karajan, conductor; Rudolf von Laun, international lawyer
- 1964: Edmund Hlawka, mathematician; Ernst Lothar, writer and director
- 1966: Ludwig von Ficker, writer and publisher
- 1967: Karl Heinrich Waggerl, writer; Lise Meitner, physicist
- 1969: Anny Felbermayer, soprano
- 1971: Fritz Wotruba, architect and artist
- 1972: Elias Canetti, writer
- 1974: Gottfried von Einem, composer
- 1974: Paul Hörbiger, actor
- 1975: Hans Tuppy, biochemist; Robert Stolz, composer
- 1976: Friedrich Torberg, writer and translator; Manfred Eigen, chemist
- 1977: Ernst Schönwiese, writer
- 1978: Hans Nowotny, chemist
- 1979: Roland Rainer, architect; Max Weiler, artist
- 1980: Alfred Uhl and Marcel Rubin, composer; Fritz Hochwälder, writer; Karl Popper, philosopher and science theorist
- 1981: Gertrud Fussenegger, writer; Werner Berg, painter
- 1982: Heinrich Harrer, mountaineer; Jacqueline de Romilly, philologist
- 1983: Hans Plank, painter
- 1985: Erika Mitterer, writer
- 1985: Joannis Avramidis, painter and sculptor
- 1986: Johann Jascha, artist
- 1987: Friederike Mayröcker, writer
- 1988: Dietmar Grieser, author and journalist
- 1990: Ernst Jandl, writer; Hans Hollein, architect
- 1991: H.C. Artmann, writer
- 1992: Carlos Kleiber, conductor; Krzysztof Penderecki, composer
- 1993: Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky, architect; Peter Schuster, chemist; Gottfried Biegelmeier, physicist; Walter Thirring, physicist; Albert Eschenmoser, chemist; Albrecht Schöne, philologist; Günther Wilke, chemist
- 1994: Josef Mikl, painter; Erwin Chargaff, chemist
- 1995: Horst Stein, conductor
- 1996: Siegfried Josef Bauer, meteorologist and geophysicist
- 1997: Bruno Gironcoli, artist; Kurt Schwertsik, composer; Hans Hass, biologist; Robert Walter, jurist; Albrecht Dihle, classical philologist; Cassos Karageorghis, archaeologist; Klemens von Klemperer, historian
- 1998: Hans-Jörg Wiedl reptile expert Helmut Denk, pathologist
- 1999: Carl Pruscha, architect; Elisabeth Lichtenberger, geographer; Karl Acham, sociologist; Walter Kohn, physicist
- 2000: Paul Kirchhof, constitutional and tax lawyer; Hans Müllejans, provost; Herwig Wolfram, historian; Gerardo Broggini, lawyer
- 2001: Anton Zeilinger, experimental physicist
- 2002: Arik Brauer, painter, poet and singer; Peter Wolf, Austrian-born producer and composer; Eugen Biser, religious philosopher; Horst Dreier, legal philosopher; Elliott H. Lieb, physicist and mathematician; Bogdan Bogdanović, architect
- 2003: Hermann Fillitz, art historian; Wolfgang M. Schmidt, mathematician
- 2004: Klaus Wolff, dermatologist
- 2005: Václav Havel, writer, dissident and former president of the Czech Republic; Christian Attersee, painter; Eric Kandel, neuroscientist; Peter Palese, virologist
- 2006: Bruno Ganz, actor; Stephen Toulmin, philosopher; Christian Meier, historian; Pierre Soulages, painter; Michael Mitterauer, historian
- 2007: Otto Tausig, actor
- 2008: Marina Abramović, performance artist
- 2009: Mati Sirkel, translator
- 2010: Paul Holdengräber, curator[2]
- 2012: Christoph Waltz, actor, director.
- 2013: Gerhard Rühm, author, composer, artist
- 2014: Abbas Kiarostami, film director, screenwriter, photographer
Cross (and Cross 1st Class)
[edit]- 1960: Karl Schiske, composer
- 1961: Günther Baszel, artist; Ernst Lothar, author and director
- 1965: Kurt Roger, Composer / Professor Georg Szell Conductor Nathan Milstein Violin
- 1966: Herbert Zipper, Conductor / Music Educator / Composer
- 1967: Maria Augusta von Trapp, matriarch of the Trapp Family Singers
- 1968: Alphons Barb, author
- 1970: Enver Čolaković, writer and poet
- 1971: Gustav Zelibor, pianist and conductor
- 1974: Erika Mitterer, writer; Marcel Rubin, composer; Arthur Hilton, chemist,
- 1975 Karl Menger, mathematician
- 1976: Wolfgang Mayer König, writer
- 1977: Wolfgang Rehm, musicologist
- 1978: Kurt Neumüller, pianist and pedagogue
- 1980: Alfred Uhl, composer
- 1981: Thomas Christian David, conductor, composer, flutist
- 1982: Margareta Sjöstedt
- 1983: Walter Bitterlich, forest scientist, Wolf Häfele, physicist
- 1984: Frank Sinatra, singer and actor, Fritz Muliar, actor and director, Ludwig Schwarzer, painter
- 1987: Sir Malcolm Pasley, literary scholar and philologist; Alois Hergouth, writer and poet; Helen Adolf, literary scholar and linguist[3]
- 1989: Norbert Pawlicki, pianist and composer
- 1994: Christian M. Nebehay, art dealer and author
- 1996: Ronald S. Calinger, American historian of Mathematics; Fausto Cercignani, Italian scholar, essayist and poet; Quirino Principe, Italian philosopher of music and dramatist
- 1997: Herbert Willi, composer; Lucian O. Meysels, author; Ernest Manheim, American sociologist of Hungarian origin
- 1998: Senta Berger, actress, Kiki Kogelnik, artist (posthumously awarded), Edith Neumann, microbiologist.,[4] Edmund Engelman, Jewish-Austrian, later American photographer and engineer
- 1999: Peter Simonischek, actor, Erich Gruen, historian.
- 2001: Klaus-Peter Sattler, composer, Hermann Maurer, computer scientist, Walter Homolka, rabbi; Hannspeter Winter, physicist; Johann Grander, inventor.
- 2002: Fabio Luisi, Italian conductor, Kurt Rudolf Fischer, philosopher, Wolfdietrich Schmied-Kowarzik, philosopher; John Ross, chemist; Seiji Ozawa, conductor
- 2003: Erich Schleyer, actor and author, Günther Granser, economist
- 2004: Oswald Oberhuber, artist, Hans Winter, veterinary pathologist
- 2005: Gottfried Kumpf, painter, architect, sculptor, Georg Ratzinger, choirmaster, Heinz Zemanek, computer pioneer
- 2006: Peter Ruzicka, German composer and artistic director, Lothar Bruckmeier, painter, Peter Wegner, computer scientist, Elisabeth Leonskaja, Russian pianist, Richard Kriesche, artist[5][6]
- 2007: Herbert W. Franke, scientist, writer, artist; Hans Walter Lack, botanist; Josef Burg, writer; Reginald Vospernik, high school director; Nuria Nono-Schönberg, Lawrence Schönberg, Ronald Schönberg, the three children of Arnold Schoenberg
- 2008: Gerhard Haszprunar, zoologist; Ernst von Glasersfeld, Austro-American constructivist, Michael Ludwig, Michael Kaufmann, manager of German culture; Reinhard Putz, anatomist; Jessye Norman, American soprano; Hannes Androsch, Finance Minister and Vice Chancellor a.D.; Gerald Holton, physicist and historian of science
- 2008: Arvo Pärt, Estonian composer
- 2009: Grita Insam, gallerist; Hans Werner Scheidl, journalist and author; Stefan Größing, sports scientist; Bruno Mamoli, specialist in neurology and psychiatry; Fredmund Malik, management scientist;[7][8] Theodore Bikel; Hans Werner Sokop, poet and translator
- 2010: Boris Pahor, Slovenian writer
- 2011: Harry Schachter, Canadian Biochemist
- 2012: Hilde Hawlicek, Austrian former government minister
- 2012: Ronny Reich, Israeli Archaeologist
- 2013: Uroš Lajovic, Slovenian conductor; Peter Bogner (art historian), art historian
- 2015: Jan M. Ziolkowski, American medievalist and Latinist
- 2015: Richard Gisser, demographer
- 2017: Julius Rebek Jr., American chemist; Michael Schratz, educational scientist[9]
- 2019: Jeroen Duindam , Dutch historian
- 2021: Jesús Padilla Gálvez, Spanish philosopher
- 2021: August Reinisch, Austrian lawyer
Forfeiture
[edit]Forfeiture of this honour became possible with Federal Law Gazette I No 128/2001, changing Act § 8a. It allows the government to strip recipients of their honours if deemed unworthy. The best known example of such a forfeiture is of the Nazi physician Heinrich Gross.[citation needed]
On 5 August 2008 the Austrian Science Minister Johannes Hahn decided not to withdraw the award from inventor Johann Grander.[citation needed] – see also Wikipedia German version and see also Austrian ministry
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e "Bundespraesident.at: Decorations of Honour". Bundespraesident.at. Retrieved 26 January 2020.
- ^ "Paul Holdengraber". PEN American Center. Archived from the original on 10 October 2012.
- ^ Haag, John. "Adolf, Helen (b. 1895)". Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Gale Research Inc. Archived from the original on 10 June 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2013.(subscription required)
- ^ Austrian Cross of Honor for Science and Art, Leo Baeck Institute, retrieved 17 August 2016
- ^ "Jubilar: Gesellschaft als Leinwand: Medienkünstler Richard Kriesche wird 75". www.kleinezeitung.at. 27 October 2015.
- ^ Gruber, Kommunikation-Land Steiermark, Markus. "Bundesauszeichnungen für besondere Verdienste". www.kommunikation.steiermark.at.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Auszeichnung für den Managementexperten: Malik erhielt das Österreichische Ehrenkreuz für Wissenschaft und Kunst". OTS.at.
- ^ ORF
- ^ "Auszeichnung für Schulforscher Michael Schratz". www.uibk.ac.at.
External links
[edit]- www.kurienwissenschaftundkunst.at Archived 9 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- Decoration of Honour, Federal President of the Republic of Austria
- Photos of the Medal
- Federal Law Gazette, 22 June 1955: Federal Law of 25 May 1955 on the creation of the Austrian Medal for Science and the Arts and the Austrian Honorary Cross for Science and the Arts (pdf, 647kb)
- Federal Law Gazette, November 2001: Amendment to the Federal Law on the establishment of an Austrian Medal for Science and the Arts and the Austrian Honorary Cross for Science and the Arts. (pdf, 5kb)
- Complete list of beneficiaries of Honours from 1952 till 23 April 2012 following parliamentary question 10542/AB XXIV. GP in 2012 (parlament.gv.at)