Mendelssohn Scholarship: Difference between revisions - Wikipedia
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Line 1: {{Short description|Award}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}} The '''Mendelssohn Scholarship''' ({{lang-de|link=no|Mendelssohn-Stipendium}}) refers to two scholarships awarded in Germany and in the United Kingdom. Both commemorate the composer [[Felix Mendelssohn]], and are awarded to promising young musicians to enable them to continue their development. ==History== Line 6 ⟶ 7: ==Mendelssohn Scholarship in Germany== In Germany, the Mendelssohn Scholarship was established in the 1870s as two awards of 1500 Marks, one for composition and one for performance, for any student of a music school in Germany, and was funded by the [[Prussia]]n state as part of an arrangement under which the [[Mendelssohn family]] donated the composer's manuscripts to the state.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://hv.spk-berlin.de/deutsch/presse/archiv/2006/060115_FMB.pdf |title= Press release on the 2006 prize from the Stiftung Funded by the Jewish Mendelssohn family, the award was discontinued by the [[Nazism|Nazis]] in 1934. It was revived by the Ministry of Culture of the former [[East Germany]] in 1963, in the form of two annual prizes for composition and for performance. It is now awarded by the [[Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation]]. Line 25 ⟶ 26: ====1879 to 1934==== * 1879 – [[Engelbert Humperdinck (composer)|Engelbert Humperdinck]], Josef Kotek, Johann Kruse,<ref name=":0">{{Cite news|url=https://www.fmb-hochschulwettbewerb.de/wettbewerb/archiv/preistrager/stipendien-1879-1934/|title=Stipendien (1879–1934)|work=Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy Hochschulwettbewerb|access-date=16 June 2018|language=de-DE}}</ref> Ernst Seyffardt<ref name=":1">Ute Hansen, Felix-Mendelssohn-Bartholdy-Preis : Geschichte, Satzung, Wettbewerbsrichtlinien, Preisträger, Stipendiaten (Berlin: Stiftung * 1880 – Marie Soldat,<ref name = "Schenk"> {{cite book |last= Schenk |first= Dietmar |title=Die Hochschule für Musik zu Berlin: |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=clqVokEKBecC |access-date= 14 November 2010 Line 41 ⟶ 42: }}</ref> Carl Wolf (composition)<ref name=":1" /> * 1881 – [[Bernhard Stavenhagen]], [[Andreas Moser]],<ref name=":0" /> Johann Kruse,<ref name=":0" /> Ethel Smyth,<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.fmb-hochschulwettbewerb.de/wettbewerb/archiv/preistrager/stipendien-1879-1934/|title=Stipendien (1879–1934)|work=Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy Hochschulwettbewerb|access-date=16 June 2018|language=de-DE}}</ref> Philipp Wolfrum,<ref name="Schenk"/> Adam Alex,<ref name=":1" /> Sophie Braun,<ref name=":1" /> Fritz Kaufmann (composition),<ref name=":1" /> Gotthold Knauth (piano),<ref name=":1" /> Alfred Sormann (piano)<ref name=":1" /> * 1882 – Marie Soldat (violin),<ref name=":1" /> Martin Gebhardt (organ),<ref name=":1" /> Elsa Harriers (voice),<ref name=":1" /> Marie Harzer (voice),<ref name=":1" /> Karl Prill (violin),<ref name=":1" /> Arnold Mendelssohn (composition),<ref name=":1" /> Carl Schneider (composition)<ref>Ute Hansen, Felix-Mendelssohn-Bartholdy-Preis : Geschichte, Satzung, Wettbewerbsrichtlinien, Preisträger, Stipendiaten (Berlin: Stiftung * 1883 – Alex Adam,<ref name=":1" /> Albert Gorter (composition),<ref name=":1" /> Marie Harzer (voice),<ref name=":1" /> Hedwig Meyer (piano),<ref name=":1" /> Martha Schwieder (piano),<ref name=":1" /> Ernst Seyffardt (composition),<ref name=":1" /> Georg Stoltzenberg (composition),<ref name=":1" /> Elise Tannenberg (piano),<ref name=":1" /> Gabriele Wietrowetz (violin),<ref name=":1" /> Margarethe Witt (violin)<ref name=":1" /> * 1884 – Carl Grothe (composition),<ref name=":1" /> Anna Haasters (piano),<ref name=":1" /> Solma Krause (piano),<ref name=":1" /> Max Puchat (composition),<ref name=":1" /> Carl Schneider (composition)<ref name=":1" /> Line 141 ⟶ 142: *1881 – [[Eugen d'Albert]] *1884 – Marie Wurm<ref>''[[s:Page:A Dictionary of Music and Musicians vol 4.djvu/733|A Dictionary of Music and Musicians]]'' Sir George Grove, Vol. 4, London, 1900</ref> *1890 – S P Waddington<ref>{{cite book|last=Banfield|first=Stephen|editor1-last=Darian-Smith|editor1-first=Kate |editor2-last= Grimshaw |editor2-first= Patricia|editor3-last = Macintyre|editor3-first= Stuart|title=Britishness abroad: transnational movements and imperial culture|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Vbp2E1E2WB8C *1895 – [[Christopher Wilson (composer)|Christopher Wilson]]<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=ydxX2U5zNgwC&pg=PA311 ''Musical Times'', May 1895, p. 311]</ref> *1899 – [[Percy Hilder Miles]] *1905 – [[George Dyson (composer)|George Dyson]] *1909 – Eric William Gritton *1912 – Joseph Alan Taffs *1916 – Philip Levi *1921 – Arthur Lawrence Sandford *1923 – [[Percy Turnbull|Percy Purvis Turnbull]] *1927 – [[Godfrey Sampson]] *1929 – [[David Moule-Evans]] *1932 – Clifton Ivor Walsworth *1935 – [[Daniel Jones (composer)|Daniel Jones]] *1948 – [[Malcolm Arnold]] *1951 – [[Kenneth Leighton]] *1954 – [[Francis Burt (composer)|Francis Burt]]<ref name="who's who 03">{{cite book |editor=Europa Publications |title=International Who's Who in Classical Music 2003 |series=International Who's Who in Classical Music |volume=19 |year=2003 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-85743-174-2 }}</ref> *1956 – [[John Exton (composer)|John Exton]] *1960 – [[David Blake (composer)|David Blake]] Line 155 ⟶ 166: *1972 – [[Nicola LeFanu]] *1974 – [[Richard Blackford]] *1979 – [[Lionel Sainsbury]]<ref>[https://books.google. *1985 – [[James Harley]]<ref>[http://www.mnstate.edu/harley/harley.html James Harley biography] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091217112603/http://www.mnstate.edu/harley/harley.html |date=17 December 2009 }}, on website of [[Minnesota State University Moorhead]]</ref> *1986 – [[Javier Álvarez (composer)|Javier Alvarez]]<ref>Javier Alvarez's website: http://www.temazcal.co.uk</ref> Line 170 ⟶ 181: *2016 – Nicholas Moroz *2018 – Nicholas Morrish<ref>Nicholas Morrish website: https://nicholasmorrish.com</ref> *2020 – Angela Slater *2021 – Hugo Bell<ref>{{Cite web |title=Hugo Bell – COMPOSER / PERFORMER / ARTIST |url=https://hugobellcomposer.com/ |access-date=2022-08-27 |language=en-GB}}</ref> *2022 – Amelia Clarkson *2023 – Jasper Dommett ==References== Line 176 ⟶ 190: ==External links== {{Official website| {{Felix Mendelssohn}} |