The politics of Hesse takes place within a framework of a federal parliamentary representative democratic republic , where the Federal Government of Germany exercises sovereign rights with certain powers reserved to the states of Germany including Hesse . The state has a multi-party system where, as in most other states of former Western Germany and the federal level, the three main parties are the centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), and the centre-left Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).
7-412: Award Hessian Cultural Prize Awarded for special achievements in art, science and cultural mediation Sponsored by Government of Hesse Location Hesse Country Germany Reward(s) 45,000 Euro Website Official website [REDACTED] The Hessian Cultural Prize (German: Hessischer Kulturpreis )
14-3909: Is an annual German culture prize awarded by the Government of Hesse . The prize was established in 1982. With a trophy of 60,000 German marks, now 45,000 Euro, it is currently the highest endowed culture prize in Germany. Recipients [ edit ] 1982 – Eugen Kogon (political scientist); Thomas Michael Mayer (chairman, Georg Büchner Association) 1983 – Karl Krolow (lyricist); Hans-Jürgen von Bose (composer); Ror Wolf (author) 1984 – Bernard Schultze (painter); Albert Mangelsdorff (jazz trombonist) 1985 – Michael Gielen (conductor and composer); Ludwig Denecke [ de ] and Heinz Rölleke [ de ] (German philologists) 1986 – Karl Dedecius (translator); D. E. Sattler [ de ] (Hölderlin scholar) 1987 – Volker Schlöndorff (film director); E. R. Nele (sculptor); Ev Grüger (painter) 1988 – Gabriele Wohmann (author) 1989 – Adolf Dresen [ ru ] (film director); Judith Rosenbauer (actor) 1990 – Horst Krüger (novelist); Egbert Strolka (Tänzer und Ballettmeister) 1991 – Horst Antes (painter und sculptor); Helmut Burmeister (museum director); Gerd J. Grein [ de ] (museum director) 1992 – Eilke Brigitte Helm (physician); Marcel Ophüls (documentary director); Ensemble Modern 1993 – Hans-Albert Walter [ de ] (philologist); F. K. Waechter (author); Heiner Goebbels (composer) 1994 – Lucius Burckhardt and Annemarie Burckhardt (sociologists); Peter Urban (translator); Adelheid Hoffmann and Hans-Jürgen „Slu“ Slusallek (galerists) 1995 – Margret Stuffmann (museum director); William Forsythe (choreographer); Karlheinz Braun [ de ] (publicist) 1996 – Klaus Reichert [ de ] (anglicist); Klappmaul Theater (youth theater company); Walter Boehlich (author and translator) 1997 – Odo Marquard (philosopher); Anna Viebrock (scenic designer); Ute Gerhard (sociologist, gender studies) 1998 – Wolf Singer (neuroscientist); Thomas Bayrle (painter); Mischka Popp and Thomas Bergmann (director) 1999 – Jürgen Habermas (philosopher); Marcel Reich-Ranicki (literary critic); Siegfried Unseld (publisher) 2000 – Barbara Klemm (photographer); Helga Fanderl (film director); José Luis Encarnação (information scientist) 2001 – Gottfried Kiesow [ de ] (historic preservator); Paul Posenenske , Berthold Penkhues and Christoph Mäckler [ eu ] (architects) 2002 – Tabea Zimmermann (violist); Hans Zender (composer and conductor); Internationales Musikinstitut Darmstadt 2003 – Florian Illies (publicist); Nicolaus Schafhausen (curator); Til Schweiger (actor) 2004 – Andrea Breth (film director); Jürgen Holtz (actor); Klaus Völker [ de ] (dramaturge) 2005 – no award 2006 – Christine Schäfer (soprano); Christoph Prégardien (tenor); Lothar Zagrosek (conductor) 2007 – René Block [ de ] (galerist); Klaus Gallwitz [ de ] and Klaus Herding [ de ] (arts historians) 2008 – Wolfgang Diefenbach (orchestra director); Albrecht Beutelspacher (mathematician); Kindertheaterbürooo Kassel (Stefan Becker, Günter Staniewski) 2009 – Salomon Korn (Jewish community leader); Karl Lehmann (Cardinal); Peter Steinacker [ pl ] (former Protestant church leader); Navid Kermani (author, Islam scholar) rejected: Fuat Sezgin (Islam scholar) 2010 – Rebecca Horn (visual artist) 2011 – Dieter Rams (designer); F. C. Gundlach (photographer); Gunter Rambow [ de ] (visual artist) 2012 – Hilmar Hoffmann (former president of
21-682: Is different from Wikidata Articles containing German-language text Government of Hesse The governments and ministers-President ( Ministerpräsidenten ) of the People's State of Hesse during the time of the Weimar Republic were: The governments of the National Socialist era : The governments and minister-Presidents of Hesse since the establishment of the Federal Republic of Germany : Since 1950,
28-1670: The Freies Deutsches Hochstift ) References [ edit ] ^ "German-Iranian author receives culture prize after religious row" . Deutsche Welle . 27 November 2009 . Retrieved 6 June 2016 . ^ "Hessischer Kulturpreis / Countertenor und Pianistin ausgezeichnet" (in German). Hessenschau. 4 November 2016 . Retrieved 4 November 2016 . ^ Santifaller, Enrico (20 September 2019). "Hessischer Kulturpreis für Wolfgang Lorch und Andrea Wandel" . BauNetz (in German). Berlin . Retrieved 23 January 2020 . ^ "Caricatura erhält Hessischen Kulturpreis" . Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). 18 November 2020 . Retrieved 27 October 2021 . ^ "Hessischer Kulturpreis: Ciesek und Nguyen-Kim für Corona-Aufklärung ausgezeichnet" . Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). 27 October 2021 . Retrieved 27 October 2021 . ^ "Prof. Dr. Anne Bohnenkamp-Renken erhält den Hessischen Kulturpreis 2022" . hessen.de . 18 March 2023 . Retrieved 22 April 2023 . Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hessian_Cultural_Prize&oldid=1255276492 " Categories : Culture of Germany Culture of Hesse Government of Hesse 1981 establishments in West Germany Awards established in 1981 Hidden categories: CS1 German-language sources (de) Articles with short description Short description
35-922: The Goethe-Institut ) 2013 – Wolf D. Prix (architect) 2014 – Peter Härtling (author) 2015 – Artistic directors of documenta I–XIII 2016 – Andreas Scholl (countertenor) and Tamar Halperin (harpsichordist and pianist) 2017 – Volker Mosbrugger (paleontologist) and Matthias Lutz-Bachmann (philosoph) 2018 – Margareta Dillinger and Johnny Klinke ( Tigerpalast Frankfurt); Regina Oehler–van Gemmeren (science journalist hr), Andreas Platthaus (journalist FAZ) and Heike Schmoll (political correspondent FAZ) 2019 – Wolfgang Lorch and Andrea Wandel (Wandel Lorch Architekten, architects) 2020 – Caricatura Museum Frankfurt and Caricatura Gallery in Kassel 2021 – Sandra Ciesek and Mai Thi Nguyen-Kim 2022 – Anne Bohnenkamp-Renken (director of
42-495: The University of Belgrade . He became famous for his translations of Russian authors, including Isaak Babel , Anton Chekhov , Daniel Charms , Leonid Dobychin , Ivan Goncharov , Nikolai Gogol , Alexander Pushkin , and Ivan Turgenev . He also translated from Serbian, Serbo-Croatian, Slovene and Czech. He was granted several important translation prizes, such as the Übersetzerpreis der Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung ,
49-771: The SPD has been in the Hesse government 45 years, the CDU for 28 years; the FDP acted as coalition partners with either CDU or SPD for 21 years (13 with SPD, 8 with CDU). Peter Urban (translator) Peter Urban (16 July 1941 in Berlin – 9 December 2013) was a German writer and translator. He studied History, German studies and Slavic studies at the Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg and
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