Portrait of Lord Melvyn Bragg, host of In Our Time

Royal Medal winners

The Royal Medal, also known as The Queen's Medal and The King's Medal (depending on the gender of the monarch at the time of the award), is a silver-gilt medal, of which three are awarded each year by the Royal Society, two for "the most important contributions to the advancement of natural knowledge" and one for "distinguished contributions in the applied sciences", done within the Commonwealth of Nations. == Background == The award was created by George IV and awarded first during 1826.

6 episodes

Episodes in this category also belong to the following categories:

HistoryScienceFellows of the Royal SocietyFellows of the American Academy of Arts and SciencesMembers of the American Philosophical SocietyRecipients of the Copley MedalWriters about religion and scienceBurials at Westminster AbbeyForeign associates of the National Academy of SciencesMembers of the Royal Swedish Academy of SciencesEnglish AnglicansEnglish people of Scottish descentHonorary members of the Saint Petersburg Academy of SciencesMembers of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and SciencesMembers of the French Academy of SciencesAlumni of St John's College, CambridgeEnglish agnosticsEnglish travel writers19th-century English writersCharles DarwinEnglish Nobel laureatesEnglish socialistsMembers of the Order of MeritPeople associated with electricityRecipients of the Pour le Mérite (civil class)19th-century British physicistsAcademic staff of the University of GöttingenAlumni of Newnham College, CambridgeAlumni of the University of EdinburghBritish Nobel laureatesEnglish abolitionistsEnglish inventorsEnglish physicistsIndependent scientistsUtilitariansVictorian writers19th-century Anglicans20th-century British biologists20th-century English mathematiciansAlumni of Somerville College, OxfordBurials at Highgate CemeteryDeaths from coronary thrombosisEnglish activistsEnglish emigrants to the United StatesExperimental physicistsFellows of Somerville College, OxfordGeorgistsHuman evolutionInstitute for Advanced Study visiting scholarsNobel laureates in ChemistryNobel laureates in PhysicsOptical physicists19th-century British chemists19th-century British writers19th-century English scientists20th-century English non-fiction writersAlumni of Christ's College, CambridgeBritish biochemistsBritish botanical illustratorsBritish crystallographers, British biophysicists, 20th-century British chemistsBritish deistsBritish scientists with disabilitiesCircumnavigators of the globeEnglish ProtestantsEnglish QuakersEnglish scepticsFellows of the Royal Geographical Society, 19th-century British biologists, 19th-century English naturalists, British evolutionary biologists, Fellows of the Zoological Society of London, Fellows of the Linnean Society of LondonForeign members of the USSR Academy of SciencesHistory of Greater ManchesterMagneticiansMathematical physicists, British theoretical physicistsMembers of the Lincean AcademyMembers of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, 20th-century British physicistsPeople from MonmouthshireRecipients of the Austrian Decoration for Science and ArtRecipients of the Dalton MedalTheoretical biologistsWinners of the Max Planck MedalWomen Nobel laureates
  1. Alfred Russel Wallace

    Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Victorian pioneer of evolutionary theory Alfred Russel Wallace.

    21 March 2013

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    Featuring: Steve Jones, George Beccaloni, Ted Benton

     
  2. Darwin: On the Origins of Charles Darwin

    Melvyn Bragg presents a series about the life and work of Charles Darwin. Darwin's early life and time at Cambridge, where his interests shifted from religion to natural science.

    5 January 2009

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    Featuring: Jim Moore, Steve Jones, David Norman, Colin Higgins

     
  3. Dorothy Hodgkin

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the work, ideas and life of the woman who won the 1964 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for her work on the structures of vitamin B12 and penicillin.

    3 October 2019

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    Featuring: Georgina Ferry, Judith Howard, Patricia Fara

     
  4. John Dalton

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss scientist John Dalton, who pioneered the development of atomic theory and carried out research into meteorology and colour blindness.

    27 October 2016

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    Featuring: Jim Bennett, Aileen Fyfe, James Sumner

     
  5. Michael Faraday

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss Michael Faraday, the most famous British scientist of the 19th century.

    25 December 2015

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    Featuring: Geoffrey Cantor, Laura Herz, Frank James

     
  6. Paul Dirac

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Bristolian theoretical physicist, ranked alongside Einstein by his peers, who won a Nobel for his work on quantum mechanics.

    5 March 2020

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    Featuring: Graham Farmelo, Valerie Gibson, David Berman