Friedrich Julius Richelot
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Friedrich Julius Richelot | |
---|---|
File:Julius-Richelot-Portrait.jpg
Portrait on Richelot's tombstone
|
|
Born | Königsberg, Prussia |
6 November 1808
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Königsberg, Prussia |
Nationality | Prussian |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | University of Königsberg |
Alma mater | University of Königsberg |
Doctoral advisor | Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi |
Doctoral students | Joannes Meyer Carl Neumann Heinrich Schröter |
Friedrich Julius Richelot (6 November 1808 – 31 March 1875) was a German mathematician, born in Königsberg. He was a student of Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi.
He was promoted in 1831 at the Philosophical Faculty of the University of Königsberg with a dissertation on the division of the circle into 257 equal parts (see references) and was a professor there.
Richelot authored numerous publications in German, French and Latin, among them — with his 1832 dissertation — the first known guide to the Euclidean construction of the regular 257-gon with compass and straightedge.
In 1825 he joined the Corps Masovia.[1]
He died in Königsberg in 1875.
References
- ↑ Kösener Korps-Listen 1910, 141, 8
Thesis
- Friedrich Julius Richelot: De resolutione algebraica aequationis x257 = 1, sive de divisione circuli per bisectionem anguli septies repetitam in partes 257 inter se aequales commentatio coronata. In: Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik. Nr. 9, 1832, S. 1–26, 146–161, 209–230, und 337–358.