J. P. Gumbert Dissertation Award 2022: Deadline Extended
1 February 2022

Photo: CSMC
With the J. P. Gumbert Dissertation Award, the CSMC honours the best doctoral thesis defended in 2021 that contributes to any aspect of the study of manuscripts and other written artefacts. The deadline for nominations has been extended to 25 March 2022.
The deadline for nominations for the J. P. Gumbert Dissertation Award has been extended to Friday, 25 March 2022.
The successful dissertation contributes to any aspect of the study of manuscripts and other written artefacts from fields such as art history, history, codicology, epigraphy, material sciences, palaeography, or philology. Its research focus can be on any period or region. Included in the award is a prize money of 5,000 Euro and fellowship for a research stay at CSMC. More information on the award and how to submit a nomination is available here.
Johan Peter Gumbert (1936-2016) was Professor and Professor Emeritus of Western Palaeography and Codicology at Leiden University from 1979 to 2001, and an expert on Latin and Dutch manuscripts. As a frequent guest at the Universität Hamburg, he was associated with the CSMC from its very beginning as well as with the COMSt-Network (Comparative Oriental Manuscript Studies).
The first winners of the award were Hui Sun (Heidelberg) and Jeremiah Coogan (Notre Dame) for their dissertations ‘Funerary Lists from Early Chinese Shaft Tombs’ and ‘Eusebius the Evangelist: Rewriting the Fourfold Gospel in Late Antiquity', respectively.