THE ANGLO-HELLENIC LEAGUE RUNCIMAN AWARD 2026
RULES AND PROCEDURE
1. The Anglo-Hellenic League is delighted to offer the 2026 the Anglo-Hellenic League Runciman Award, a prize in memory of historian and philhellene Sir Steven Runciman (1903-2000), for an original work, wholly or mainly about some aspect of Greece or the world of Hellenism, published in English in any country of the world in its first edition during 2025.
2. The aim of the award is to stimulate interest in Greek history, literature, language and culture from earliest times to the present; to promote wider knowledge and understanding of Greece (ancient, medieval and contemporary), and of Greece’s values and contribution to civilization; and to encourage good and accessible writing, of which Sir Steven’s works are an outstanding example. Books submitted must fall within this framework of subject matter. The award may be made for a work in the field of history, literary studies, cultural studies, biography, travel and topography, the arts, architecture, archaeology, the environment, social and political sciences or current affairs; or for a work of fiction, poetry or drama, provided that it falls within scope of the aim set out above. Works in translation (e.g. poetry, fiction, drama etc.) from any period of literature in Greek are also eligible; non-
literary translated works will not be considered.
3. The winning book will demonstrate two key criteria:
• outstanding quality of research, scholarship, and/or creativity, skill and innovation;
and
• outstanding accessibility, quality of writing and appeal to interested ordinary readers.
4. The winning book is expected to command public attention and to stimulate a wide readership. We welcome books representative of all periods of Greek history and culture from antiquity through to our own time. We strongly encourage publishers to submit for the judges’ consideration not only outstanding academic writing, but also outstanding creative works of drama, fiction, poetry and travel writing.
5. Because of our mission to reward books that appeal to interested general readers, the League encourages publishers to nominate books that can be afforded by such readers, i.e. not books that are likely to be acquired mostly by libraries. Although they retain discretion to do otherwise, the judges have indicated that they are unlikely to place on their short list books costing more than £90 (unless a cheaper paperback version is available or in the offing), however great their merit.
6. Nominations of books must be made on the attached entry form and sent by e-mail by close of business on Monday 15 December 2025 to the Runciman Award administrator, Dr Jonathan Williams, at runciman@anglohellenicleague.org.
7. We request that, at nomination stage, publishers submit to us names and details of nominated books only. In early January 2026, the judging panel will decide on a long list of books. The administrator will then formally request that publishers submit copies of those books to the panel members as quickly as possible. It is a condition of nominating books in the first round that the publisher of a longlisted book (or books) will submit, in January 2026, six printed copies of each longlisted book: one to each of the judges and one to the administrator of the award.
8. Please note that one of our judges lives in Greece and another in Sweden, and a condition of nominating a book is that the publisher will meet (either upfront or by reimbursement after the event) any customs and clearance charges levied at international borders, whether by the publisher’s courier company or by the recipient state or both. Our judges will not accept e-books or books in the form of PDF files (or similar).
9. In selecting books for nomination publishers should note:
• no more than seven books may be nominated by any one publisher;
• complex publishing houses, with many departments, are encouraged to co-ordinate their nominations internally and to submit a single nominating form (with no more than seven books in total);
• the following types of book are not eligible:
(i) books of multiple authorship (i.e. three or more authors or contributors);
(ii) books translated by multiple hands (i.e. three or more translators);
(iii) books primarily authored by someone other than the editor or editors in respect of whom the nomination would be made (e.g. a new edition of a classical or Byzantine or modern text; an edition of an author’s correspondence or essays, if by an editor other than the author)
(iv) books in which any of the award’s current judges or the award’s administrator have played a substantial role (e.g. as translator, co-translator, author or co-author or by contributing a preface, introduction or afterword);
• the inside of the book must have 2025 stated as the copyright year of its first edition;
• for the avoidance of doubt: books to be published in 2025 after nominations close on Monday 15 December (i.e. between 16 and 31 December 2025) are eligible for the award in 2026 provided they are copyright-dated 2025 inside the book. Such books will not be eligible for the award in 2027;
• the UK Recommended Retail Price (where applicable) of each nominated book must be indicated on the entry form;
• information about the currently available format of the published book and about the publisher’s intention (if known) to produce a paperback edition is requested;
• (optional) information about any known authoritative reviews of the nominated book(s) is sought (please do not reproduce publishers’ blurbs unless these are references to authoritative reviews).
10. The chair of judges in 2026 is Sofka Zinovieff. The other judges are: Prof. Esther Eidinow, Prof. Vassiliki Kolocotroni, Prof. Ingela Nilsson and Dr Oliver Thomas.
11. The prize is £10,000. How the prize is awarded, whether to one work or more than one, is the responsibility of the judges alone; their decision is final. Feedback is not given at any stage.
12. It is a condition of the award that longlisted and shortlisted books must be readily available for purchase to readers in the UK by the time that the longlist is drawn up (i.e. no later than 2 January 2026). Publishers of longlisted and shortlisted books will be notified at the appropriate point in the competition. The League will advertise longlisted and shortlisted books on its website and on X, Bluesky, Facebook and LinkedIn, using images of the books and drawing on publishers’ existing publicity material for them.
13. After the judges have decided on their shortlist, the administrator will ask publishers for photographs of the shortlisted authors to use in publicity material, and will seek contact details for direct communications with the shortlisted authors at that stage.
14. When the judges have decided on the winning book, its author or translator will be notified personally by the administrator. The other shortlisted authors will also be personally informed about the final result. The winner must make best efforts to attend the award ceremony at King’s College London on the evening of Tuesday 9 June 2026 to receive the
award.
Queries should be addressed to the administrator by e-mail as above.
For the Council of the League
9 October 2025
Sponsors Athanasios C. Laskaridis Charitable Foundation & A. G. Leventis
Foundation