The Academy of Athens Honors the Work of Teresa Shawcross

©Thodoris Anagnostopoulos/PHOTOPRESS TH&ATH ANAGNOSTOPOULOI
©Thodoris Anagnostopoulos/PHOTOPRESS TH&ATH ANAGNOSTOPOULOI

At its annual awards ceremony yesterday evening, 18th December 2025, Greece’s national academy of arts, science and letters, the Academy of Athens, awarded Teresa Shawcross the “Lykourgeio Prize”.

Τhe prize was given this year in Arts and Letters in the field of History for “an original, synthetic work” on “a subject relating to the history of the Greek nation from earliest antiquity to the contemporary era”. The plenary assembly of the Academicians decided to recognise Teresa Shawcross in this way because “by her outstanding work, Wisdom’s House, Heaven’s Gate: Athens and Jerusalem in the Middle Ages, she very greatly advances the study of the history and geography of our Mediterranean Sea, as well as the knowledge of the philosophy, theology, and manners of those dwelling around it”.

The original statement, written in Ancient Greek, as befits an institution that considers itself to be a direct heir of the ancient academy founded by Plato in Athens, reads: “ὅτι τῷ ἐξόχῳ αὐτῆς πονήματι Wisdom’s House, Heaven’s Gate: Athens and Jerusalem in the Middle Ages τὴν περί τὴν ἱστορίαν καὶ γεωγραφίαν τῆς καθ᾽ἡμᾶς μεσογείου θαλάσσης μελέτην, ἅμα δὲ καὶ τὴν περὶ τὴν θεολογίαν τά τε ἤθη τῶν περὶ αὐτὴν οἰκούντων γνῶσιν τὰ μέγιστα προάγει”.

 

We would like to say a massive Congratulations to Professor Shawcross!!!

 

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♱ John Lowden ♱ (1953-2026)

It is with great sadness that we announce that John Lowden, Professor of Art History at the Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London and Fellow of the British Academy, died peacefully on Tuesday, 27 January 2026, with his wife Joanna Cannon and son Gregory at his bedside. John had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease many years earlier.

John studied for his MA and PhD at the Courtauld and joined its academic staff in 1982 after a brief period teaching at St Andrews. He taught generations of students there until his retirement in 2017. Byzantinists will know him especially for his many works on Byzantine manuscripts, including Illuminated Prophet Books (1998),  The Octateuchs (1992) and the Jaharis Gospel Lectionary(2009), as well as his invaluable survey text Early Christian and Byzantine Art(1997). These all conveyed John’s deep and close understanding of medieval books, how they were made and how they were read. However, his intellectual reach was much broader. He set up the International Gothic Ivories Project (http://www.gothicivories.courtauld.ac.uk/) published an award-winning two-volume work on the Bibles Moralisées, and was a co-investigator of the Royal manuscripts in the British Library (leading to a major exhibition in 2012). That is only a small taste of his output.

John was far more than his research: he will be remembered by many as a generous and joyous colleague, an inspiring teacher and a great friend to many. His sense of humour and his pithy comments and questions in seminars were infectious, but also kept you on your toes. John’s own students – of whom there are many – will no doubt produce fuller and more insightful memories in the days and weeks to come.

John always ended the annual medieval postgraduate colloquium at the Courtauld by reminding everyone of what an auspicious day it was; so it seems only fitting to end by noting that John died on the Feast of the Return of the Relics of St John Chrysostom to Constantinople, when we also commemorate the memory of the Venerable Peter of Alexandria, Marciana wife of Justin I, Ashot Kuropalates of Georgia, St Devota of Corsica and many, many others. John is in excellent company, but he will be greatly missed by all of us who remain behind.

Antony Eastmond