A mathematical union: William Henry and Grace Chisholm Young
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5655337
Cites work
Cited in
(16)- Mathematics Ho! Which modern mathematics was modernist?
- William Henry Young, an unconventional president of the International Mathematical Union
- The rise of British analysis in the early 20th century: the role of G. H. Hardy and the London Mathematical Society.
- Discovering the discovered integral: William Henry Young und das Lebesgue-Integral
- From national to international society: The London Mathematical Society, 1867-1900
- Arthur Cayley as Sadleirian professor: A glimpse of mathematics teaching at 19th-century Cambridge
- Wikipedia and the portrayal of collaborative networks of nineteenth-century British mathematicians
- Mini-workshop: Felix Klein's foreign students: opening up the way for transnational mathematics. Abstracts from the mini-workshop held October 15--20, 2023
- In memoriam: Ivor Grattan-Guinness (June 23, 1941 -- December 12, 2014).
- ``When in Rome \dots: Marie Litzinger's letters home, 1923--1924
- W. H. Young at Aberystwyth
- Irrational numbers in English language textbooks, 1890--1915: Constructions and postulates for the completeness of the real numbers
- Mathematical bibliography for W. H. and G. C. Young
- Segre's university courses and the blossoming of the Italian School of Algebraic Geometry
- Two contrasting and complementary views of Göttingen: letters from the first female Norwegian Ph.D. in mathematics, Elizabeth Stephansen, to her compatriot Carl Størmer in the winter semester of 1902/3
- The historical context of the gender gap in mathematics
This page was built for publication: A mathematical union: William Henry and Grace Chisholm Young
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q5655337)