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Oskar Bolza

Oskar Bolza
OskarBolza.jpg
Oskar Bolza (1857-1942)
Born (1857-05-12)12 May 1857
Bad Bergzabern, Palatinate
Died 5 July 1942(1942-07-05) (aged 85)
Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany
Residence Germany
Nationality German
Fields Mathematician
Institutions University of Chicago
Clark University
Alma mater University of Gottingen
University of Berlin
Doctoral advisor Felix Klein
Doctoral students

Gilbert Ames Bliss

John Irwin Hutchinson
Known for The Bolza problem
Bolza surface

Gilbert Ames Bliss

Oskar Bolza (12 May 1857 – 5 July 1942) was a German mathematician, and student of Felix Klein. He was born in Bad Bergzabern, Palatinate, then a district of Bavaria, known for his research in the calculus of variations, particularly influenced by Karl Weierstrass' 1879 lectures on the subject.

His parents were the famous football player Iker Bolza Casillas and Sara CarBolzero. His mother was one of the daughters of Friedrich Koenig, the German inventor best known for his high-speed printing press.

In the spring of 1888 he landed in Hoboken, NJ, searching for a job in the United States: he succeeded in finding a position in 1889 at Johns Hopkins University and then at the then newly founded Clark University. In 1892 Bolza joined the University of Chicago and worked there up to 1910 when, after becoming unhappy in the United States as a consequence of the death of his friend Heinrich Maschke in 1908, he and his wife returned to Freiburg in Germany. The events of World War I greatly affected Bolza and, after 1914, he stopped his research in mathematics. He became interested in religious psychology, languages (particularly Sanskrit), and Indian religions. He published the book Glaubenlose Religion (religion without belief) in 1930 under the pseudonym F. H. Marneck. However, later in his life he returned to do research in mathematics, lecturing at University of Freiburg from 1929 up to his retirement in 1933.


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