Miguel de Cervantes Prize

The Miguel de Cervantes Prize (Spanish: Premio de Literatura en Lengua Castellana Miguel de Cervantes) is awarded annually to honour the lifetime achievement of an outstanding writer in the Spanish language.

Miguel de Cervantes Prize
Medal of the Miguel de Cervantes Prize
CountrySpain
Presented byMinistry of Culture
Reward(s)€125,000
First awarded1976
WebsiteCervantesPresentacion

History

The prize was established in 1975 by the Ministry of Culture of Spain and first awarded the following year.[1] The Encyclopædia Britannica calls it "most prestigious and remunerative award given for Spanish-language literature".[1] The winner receives a monetary award of 125,000 euros, which makes it one of the richest literary prizes in the world.[2] The prize rewards authors from any Spanish-speaking nation and recognizes the recipient's overall body of work.[1] Of the forty-seven prizes awarded in the history of the Cervantes Prize, only six have ever been awarded to women. In 1988, the Spanish writer María Zambrano (1904-1991) was the first female writer to be honored. The award is named after Miguel de Cervantes, author of Don Quixote.[2] The candidates are proposed by the Association of Spanish Language Academies (i.e., the Royal Spanish Academy).[3]

As of the presentation of the 2023 award to Luis Mateo Díez, the recipients have been recognized for their writing of novels, poetry, short stories, essays, translations, philosophy or dramas – or for combinations thereof. With two winners in 1979, there have been 49 recipients of the Miguel de Cervantes Prize.

The Cervantes Prize and the Nobel Prize in Literature

Three of the 45 winners of the Miguel de Cervantes Prize have also won the Nobel Prize in Literature. Octavio Paz (Cervantes 1981, Nobel 1990) and Mario Vargas Llosa (Cervantes 1994, Nobel 2010), were awarded the Nobel Prize in subsequent years, while Camilo José Cela received the Nobel Prize in 1989 and was awarded the Cervantes Prize in 1995.

Laureates

The list of winners is available at the official Premio 'Miguel Cervantes' website.[4]

YearPictureWinnerCountryGenre(s)
1976 Jorge Guillén  Spainpoetry
1977 Alejo Carpentier  Cubanovel, essay
1978 Dámaso Alonso  Spainpoetry
1979[5] Jorge Luis Borges  Argentinashort story, poetry, essay, translation
Gerardo Diego  Spainpoetry
1980 Juan Carlos Onetti  Uruguaynovel
1981 Octavio Paz  Mexicopoetry, essay
1982Luis Rosales  Spainpoetry, essay
1983 Rafael Alberti  Spainpoetry
1984 Ernesto Sabato  Argentinanovel, essay
1985 Gonzalo Torrente Ballester  Spainnovel
1986 Antonio Buero Vallejo  Spaindrama
1987 Carlos Fuentes  Mexiconovel, essay
1988 María Zambrano  Spainphilosophy, essay
1989 Augusto Roa Bastos  Paraguaynovel
1990 Adolfo Bioy Casares  Argentinanovel, short story
1991 Francisco Ayala  Spainnovel, short story, essay, translation
1992 Dulce María Loynaz  Cubapoetry
1993 Miguel Delibes  Spainnovel
1994 Mario Vargas Llosa  Perunovel, essay, short story, drama
1995 Camilo José Cela  Spainnovel
1996José García Nieto  Spainpoetry
1997 Guillermo Cabrera Infante  Cubanovel
1998 José Hierro  Spainpoetry
1999 Jorge Edwards  Chilenovel
2000 Francisco Umbral  Spainnovel, essay
2001 Álvaro Mutis  Colombiapoetry, novel
2002 José Jiménez Lozano  Spainnovel
2003 Gonzalo Rojas  Chilepoetry
2004 Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio  Spainnovel, essay
2005Sergio Pitol  Mexiconovel
2006 Antonio Gamoneda  Spainpoetry
2007 Juan Gelman  Argentinapoetry
2008 Juan Marsé  Spainnovel
2009 José Emilio Pacheco  Mexicopoetry, novel, short story
2010 Ana María Matute  Spainnovel
2011 Nicanor Parra  Chilepoetry
2012 José Manuel Caballero Bonald  Spainpoetry, novel
2013 Elena Poniatowska  Mexiconovel
2014 Juan Goytisolo  Spainnovel, essay
2015 Fernando del Paso  Mexiconovel, poetry, essay, drama, short story
2016 Eduardo Mendoza  Spainnovel, drama
2017 Sergio Ramírez  Nicaraguanovel, short story, essay
2018 Ida Vitale  Uruguaypoetry, prose, essay
2019 Joan Margarit  Spainpoetry
2020 Francisco Brines[6]  Spainpoetry
2021 Cristina Peri Rossi  Uruguayprose, poetry, short story, translation
2022 Rafael Cadenas  Venezuelapoetry, essay
2023Luis Mateo Díez  Spainnovel, essay

Laureates per country

The following table shows the number of laureates per country:

RankCountryLaureates
1  Spain25
2  Mexico6
3  Argentina4
4  Chile3
4  Cuba3
4  Uruguay3
7  Colombia1
7  Nicaragua1
7  Paraguay1
7  Peru1
7  Venezuela1
Total49

Notes and references

External links