Levitzki together with
Shimshon Amitsur, who had been one of his students at the Hebrew University, were each awarded the
Israel Prize in
exact sciences in 1953, the inaugural year of the prize, for their work on the laws of noncommutative rings. Levitzki's son
Alexander Levitzki, a recipient of the Israel Prize in 1990, in
life sciences, established the
Levitzki Prize in the name of his parents, Jacob and Charlotte, for Israeli research in the field of algebra. ==See also==