Husband
|
Wife
|
Motivation
|
Year(s) Nominated[d]
|
Sources
|
Portrait
|
Name
|
Portrait
|
Name
|
Physiology or Medicine
|
|
Oskar Vogt (1870–1959)
|
|
Cécile Vogt-Mugnier (1875–1962)
|
"for their work concerning the anatomy and genetics of the brain (the architectonics of the cerebral cortex, cortex localization, function of corpus striatum, cerebral cytoarchitecture and myeloarchitectonics, diseases of the striatum system, aging of glial cells and their changes in schizophrenia)."
|
1922, 1923, 1926, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1950, 1951, 1953
|
[25][26]
|
|
George Frederick Dick (1881–1967)
|
|
Gladys Rowena Henry-Dick (1881–1963)
|
"for their work on scarlet fever (the etiology, identification of scarlet fever streptococci by neutralization of the toxin with specific antitoxin, passive immunization and treatment with antitoxin, toxin test for susceptibility and active immunization)."
|
1925, 1926, 1927, 1928, 1935
|
[27][28]
|
|
Edward Mellanby (1884–1955)
|
|
May Tweedy-Mellanby (1882–1978)
|
"for their work on the relation of dietary deficiencies to human diseases (rickets and the nervous conditions produced by lack of vitamin A, and dental structure and dental diseases)."
|
1939
|
[29][30]
|
|
David Tillerson Smith (1898–1981)
|
|
Susan Gower-Smith (1897–1983)
|
"for their work on the use of nicotinic acid in the pellagra therapy."
|
1939
|
[31][32]
|
|
George Van Siclen Smith (1900–1984)
|
|
Olive Watkins Smith (1901–1983)
|
"for their investigation of a possible hormonal cause of toxemia of pregnancy.
|
1940
|
[33][34]
|
Physics
|
|
Geoffrey Ronald Burbidge (1925–2010)
|
|
Margaret Peachey-Burbidge (1919–2020)
|
"for their fundamental theory on stellar nucleosynthesis that most heavier chemical elements were formed through stellar evolution."
|
1964
|
[35][36]
|
|
Pierre Connes (1928–2019)
|
|
Janine Roux-Connes (b. 1934)
|
"for their development of the Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy method."
|
1970
|
[37][38]
|
Chemistry
|
|
Walter Noddack (1893–1960)
|
|
Ida Tacke-Noddack (1896–1978)
|
"for their discovery of the chemical elements technetium and rhenium."
|
1933, 1935, 1937
|
[39][40]
|
|
Jacques Tréfouël (1897–1977)
|
|
Thérèse Broyer-Tréfouël (1892–1978)
|
"for their research on sulfanilamide, a novel class of antibiotic drug."
|
1950
|
[41][42]
|
|
Bernard Pullman (1919–1996)
|
|
Alberte Bucher-Pullman (1920–2011)
|
"for their contributions to the application of quantum chemistry to predicting the carcinogenic properties of aromatic hydrocarbons."
|
1963, 1965, 1968, 1969
|
[43][44]
|
Literature
|
|
Jean Paul Sartre[e] (1905–1980)
|
|
Simone de Beauvoir[e] (1908–1986)
|
J. P. Sartre: Nausea (1938) The Roads to Freedom (1945–49) Existentialism Is a Humanism (1946) Being and Nothingness (1954)
|
1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964
|
[46]
|
S. de Beauvoir: She Came to Stay (1943) The Ethics of Ambiguity (1947) The Second Sex (1949) The Mandarins (1954)
|
1961, 1969
|
[47]
|
Peace
|
|
Edwin Doak Mead (1849–1937)
|
|
Lucia James Ames-Mead (1856–1936)
|
"for promoting together international justice and peace through peace conferences, managed to open a free peace academy in Boston (The International School of Peace), and publishing and distributing literature on peace."
|
1913
|
[48][49]
|
|
Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882–1945)
|
|
Anna Eleanor Roosevelt (1884–1962)
|
F. D. Roosevelt "for taking an active part in the fields of politics, economics and culture in order to secure world peace, and for his efforts to end World War II."
|
1934, 1938, 1939, 1945
|
[50]
|
A. E. Roosevelt "for her work to further understanding between people of different races and between people from different nations, especially while serving as Chairman of the UN Commission on Human Rights."
|
1947, 1949, 1955, 1956, 1962
|
[51]
|
|
Juan Domingo Perón (1895–1974)
|
|
María Eva Duarte-Perón (1919–1952)
|
"for their humanitarian efforts in Argentina particularly on promoting labor rights, championing women's suffrage, eliminating poverty and establishing charities to the working-class Argentines."
|
1949
|
[52][53]
|
|
Robert Baden-Powell (1857–1941)
|
|
Olave St. Clair Baden-Powell (1889–1977)
|
R. Baden-Powell "for having founded the Boys Scouts movement that embodies brotherly mentality and non-militaristic characters."
|
1928, 1933, 1937, 1938, 1939
|
[54]
|
O. Baden-Powell "for her international contribution as a founder of the Scout movement for girls."
|
1959
|
[55]
|
|
Geoffrey Leonard Cheshire (1917–1992)
|
|
Margaret Susan Ryder-Cheshire (1924–2000)
|
"for establishing numerous charitable health and welfare organizations for the physically disabled and people living with terminal illnesses and neurological conditions."
|
1967
|
[56][57]
|
|
Gunnar Myrdal (1898–1987)
|
|
Alva Reimer-Myrdal (1902–1986)
|
"for their many services to the international community and their promotion of international understanding."
|
1970
|
[58][59]
|