Browne Medal
The Browne medals are gold medals which since 1774 have been awarded for annual competitions in Latin and Greek poetry at Cambridge University.
Sir William Browne, who had been president of the College of Physicians, died in 1774. His will left an endowment to the university:
Sir William Browne having directed his executors to produce a die for annually striking of two medals of gold, of five guineas value each, to be sent to the vice-chancellor of Cambridge about the beginning of January, to be given by him, at the following commencement, to two undergraduates, one for the best Greek Ode in imitation of Sappho, the other for the best Latin ode in imitation of Horace, on a subject to be appointed by the Vice-Chancellor; also one other gold medal, of like value, to be given by him to the undergraduate who shall produce the best Greek epigram after the model of Anthologia, and the best Latin epigram after the model of Martial.[1]
The endowment, invested as a trust fund called the Browne Fund, is still used to encourage classical study at the university.[2]
List of winners
This list is incomplete; most of this list is from [3] The winners of the prize are published in The Cambridge University Reporter.
References
- ^ Gentleman's Magazine, 1774, p.44. Quoted by Brown, Laurence, A catalogue of British historical medals 1760-1960, vol.I: the accession of George III to the death of William IV, London, Seaby Publications Ltd, 1980, p21.92
- ^ Statutes and Ordinances of the University of Cambridge
- ^ The Top Sir William Browne Medallists
- ^ Francis Wrangham (A Cambridge Alumni Database)
- ^ Samuel Butler (A Cambridge Alumni Database)
- ^ The Classical Journal, Vols. 12-13
- ^ The Church of England Magazine, Vol.11
- ^ The Gentleman's Magazine, 1842
- ^ The Gentleman's Magazine, 1843
- ^ Westcott, Brooke Foss (A Cambridge Alumni Database)
- ^ Huddleston, Tristram Frederick Croft (A Cambridge Alumni Database)
- ^ Baldwin's auction listing
- ^ Nottinghamshire History
- ^ Nothing of Importance, Bernard Adams (Forgotten Books 2012)
- ^ Nothing of Importance, Bernard Adams (Forgotten Books 2012)
- ^ Obituary: Professor J. M. Cook. N.G.L. Hammond, The Independent, 22 October 2011. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
- ^ Christie's auction listing, 1999
- ^ Murray Edwards student awarded Sir William Browne Medal
- ^ Alexander Hardwick (2013) awarded Sir William Browne's Medal for Latin Epigram
- 'The Browne Prize Medals', Bulletin of the History of Medicine Vol. XIX, No. 4, April 1946, pp. 433–49.
External links