MEDALLISTS 



215 



1899. George Francis Fitzgerald. 

 William Carmichael Mclntosh. 



1900. Percy Alexander MacMahon. 

 Alfred Newton. 



1901. William Edward Ayrton. 

 William Thomas Blanford. 



1902. Horace Lamb. 

 Edward Albert Schafer. 



1903. Sir David Gill. 

 Horace T. Brown. 



1904. David Bruce. 

 William Burnside. 



1905. John Henry Poynting. 



1905. Charles Scott Sherrington. 



1906. Alfred George Greenhill. 

 Dukinfield Henry Scott. 



1907. Ernest William Hoteon. 

 Ramsay H. Traquuir. 



1908. John Milne. 

 Henry Head. 



1909. Augustus E. H. Love. 

 Ronald Ross. 



1910. John Joly. 

 Frederick Orpen Bower. 



1911. George Chrystal. 

 William Maddock Bayliss. 



The Davy Medal 



is awarded annually for the most important discovery in Chemistry made in 

 Europe or Anglo- America. (See p. 177.) 





1877. 

 1878. 

 1879. 



1880. 

 1881. 

 1882. 



1883. 

 1884. 



1885. 

 1886. 



1887. 

 1888. 

 1889. 

 1890. 

 1891. 



Davy Medallists 



Robert Wilhelm Bunsen. 



Gustav Robert Kirchhoff. 



Louis Paul Cailletet. 



Raoul Pictet. 



Paul 6mile Lecoq de Bois- 



baudran. 

 Charles Friedel. 

 Adolf Baeyer. 



Dimitri Ivanovitch Mendeleeff. 

 Lothar Meyer. 

 Marcelin Berthelot. 

 Julius Thomsen. 

 Adolph Wilhelm Hermann 



Kolbe. 



Jean Servais Stas. 

 Jean Charles Galissard de 



Marignac. 



John A. R. Newlands. 

 William Crookes. 

 William Henry Perkin. 

 Emil Fischer. 

 Victor Meyer. 



1892. Fran9ois Marie Raoult. 



1893. Jac. Hen. van't Hoff. 

 Joseph Achille Le Bel. 



1894. Per Theodor Cleve. 



1895. William Ramsay. 



1896. Henri Moissan. 



1897. John Henry Gladstone. 



1898. Johannes Wislicenus. 



1899. Edward Schunck. 



1900. Guglielmo Koerner. 



1901. George Downing Liveing. 



1902. Svante August Arrhenius. 



1903. Pierre Curie and Madame Curie. 



1904. William Henry Perkin, Jun. 



1905. Albert Ladenburg. 



1906. Rudolf Fittig. 



1907. Edward W. Morley. 



1908. William Augustus Tilden. 



1909. Sir James Dewar. 



1910. Theodore W. Richards. 



1911. Henry Edward Armstrong. 



The Darwin Medal, 



which is accompanied by a grant of d100, is given biennially in reward of 

 work of acknowledged distinction (especially in Biology) in the field in which 

 Mr. Darwin himself laboured. The award may be made either to a British 

 subject or a foreigner, and without distinction of sex. (See p. 177.) 



