- Danish Mathematical Society
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The Danish Mathematical Society is a society of Danish mathematicians founded in 1873 at the University of Copenhagen, a year after French Mathematical Society. According to the society website, it has "the purpose of acting for the benefit of mathematics in research and education."
Contents
History
The society was founded after the idea of Thorvald N. Thiele. The first committee was composed of Thiele, Hieronymus Georg Zeuthen and Julius Petersen.
Presidents
- Johan Jensen (1892–1903)
- Vilhelm Herman Oluf Madsen (1903–1910)
- Niels Nielsen (1910–1917)
- Johannes Mollerup (1917–1926)
- Harald Bohr (1926–1929, 1937–1951)
- Børge Jessen (1954–1958)
See also
External links
- K. Ramskov, The Danish Mathematical Society through 125 Years, Historia Mathematica, 2000.
- The Danish Mathematical Society, English webpage
- O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Danish Mathematical Society", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive
International member societies European Consortium for Mathematics in Industry • European Society for Mathematical and Theoretical Biology • International Association of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics
National member societies Austria • Belarus • Belgium (Belgian Mathematical Society · Belgian Statistical Society) • Bosnia and Herzegovina • Bulgaria • Croatia • Cyprus • Czech Republic • Denmark • Estonia • Finland • France (Mathematical Society of France · Society of Applied & Industrial Mathematics · Société Francaise de Statistique) • Georgia • Germany • Greece • Hungary • Iceland • Ireland • Israel • Italy (Italian Mathematical Union · Società Italiana di Matematica Applicata e Industriale · The Italian Association of Mathematics applied to Economic and Social Sciences) • Latvia • Lithuania • Luxembourg • Macedonia • Malta • Montenegro • Netherlands • Norway (Norwegian Mathematical Society · Norwegian Statistical Association) • Poland • Portugal • Romania (Romanian Mathematical Society · Romanian Society of Mathematicians) • Russia (Moscow Mathematical Society · St. Petersburg Mathematical Society · Ural Mathematical Society) • Slovakia (Slovak Mathematical Society · Union of Slovak Mathematicians and Physicists) • Slovenia • Spain (Catalan Society of Mathematics · Royal Spanish Mathematical Society · Spanish Society of Statistics and Operations Research · The Spanish Society of Applied Mathathematics) • Sweden (Swedish Mathematical Society · Swedish Society of Statisticians) • Switzerland • Turkey • Ukraine • United Kingdom (Edinburgh Mathematical Society · Institute of Mathematics and its Applications · London Mathematical Society)
Academic Institutional Members Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics • Academy of Sciences of Moldova • Centre de Recerca Matemàtica • Centre International de Rencontres Mathématiques • Centrum voor Wiskunde en Informatica • Emmy Noether Research Institute for Mathematics • Erwin Schrödinger International Institute for Mathematical Physics • European Institute for Statistics, Probability and Operations Research • Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques • Institut Henri Poincaré • Institut Mittag-Leffler • International Centre for Mathematical Sciences • Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences • Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut Oberwolfach • Mathematical Research Institute • Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences • Research Institute of Mathematics of the Voronezh State University • Serbian Academy of Science and Arts • Mathematical Society of Serbia • Stefan Banach International Mathematical Center • Thomas Stieltjes Institute for Mathematics
Institutional Members Central European University • Faculty of Mathematics at the University of Barcelona • Cellule MathDoc
Categories:- Mathematical societies
- 1873 establishments in Denmark
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