French writer Jean-Paul Sartre .
Two laureates have refused the prize. Jean-Paul Sartre refused the Literature prize in 1964 Le Duc Tho of North Vietnam refused the Peace Prize in 1973 when Henry Kissinger was also awarded one after bombing Hanoi.
Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace
Many Indians won the nobel prize they are Rabindranath Tagore(Nobel Prize for Literature),Chandrashekar Venkata Raman(Nobel Prize in Physics),Hargobind Khorana(The Nobel Prize for Medicine),Mother Teresa(The Nobel Peace Prize),Subramanian Chandrashekar(The Nobel Prize for Physics),Amartya Sen(Nobel Prize for Economics) and Venkatraman Ramakrishnan Nobel Prize in Chemistry along with Thomas A. Steitz and Ada Yonath
Nobel (for Alfred Nobel) Peace (opposite of war) Prize (you won something)Nobel Peace Prize
Jean-Paul Sartre, a renowned French philosopher and writer, declined the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1964. He refused the prize on the grounds that he did not believe in accepting official honors or awards.
The French writer Jean-Paul Sartre refused the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1964, the only person ever to have done so. He explained that his personal belief was that writers should not accept awards which could prejudice their artistic freedom. Le Duc Tho also refused the Peace Prize in 1973 4 others were obliged to decline by their governments, including Boris Pasternak (Literature Prize 1958)
The Nobel Peace Prize was created in 1901 by the will of Swedish inventor Alfred Nobel.
No, Alfred Nobel never won the Nobel Prize, because he, the inventor of dynamites, was the one who created the Nobel Prize.
Hi: There is no nobel prize in nursing, thus there is no holder of the nobel prize in nursing.
Alfred Nobel established the Nobel prize in his will. The prize was officially established upon Nobel's death December 10, 1896.
The first Nobel Prize was awarded in 1901.
Jean-Paul Sartre, a French writer and philosopher, refused the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1964. He declined the award due to his belief that writers should not align themselves with institutions or accept accolades that could compromise their independence.