Nobel prizes
A code of statutes, drawn up after Nobel's death, has interpreted and carried out his will through the years. The statutes have modified the will by providing that a prize may be omitted in any year. The peace prize has been omitted most frequently.
Nominations of candidates are submitted to the prize-awarding institutions before February 1 of each year. The nominations are made by individuals and institutions qualified according to regulations of the appropriate awarding body. No person may apply directly. Besides the cash prize, each award consists of a gold medal and a diploma bearing a citation.
Prizes have been refused at timesgenerally because of political pressure. Adolf Hitler's decree of 1937 forbade Germans to accept Nobel prizes because the peace prize for 1935 had been awarded to one of his political enemies, the German pacifist Carl von Ossietzky. Prizewinners who decline, nevertheless, are entered into the list of Nobel laureates. Those unwilling or unable to accept the prize may apply for and receive the medal and diploma later, as Alexander Solzhenitsyn did in 1974.
The Nobel prizes were first awarded on Dec. 10, 1901, the fifth anniversary of Nobel's death. They have since been given every December 10 when possiblethe peace prize in Oslo, the other five in Stockholm. No Nobel prizes were announced during the years 194042. The amount of each prize was more than 40,000 dollars in 1901; in 1991 it reached 1 million dollars. Often a prize is divided between two or more winners. In keeping with Nobel's will, all nationalities are eligible for awards.
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Source: Encyclopedia Britannica

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