- Karl Christian von Langsdorf
Karl Christian von Langsdorf, also known as Carl Christian von Langsdorff, (born
May 18 ,1757 inNauheim ; diedJune 10 ,1834 inHeidelberg ) was a Germanmathematician ,geologist ,natural scientist andengineer .Life
Langsdorf was the son of Georg Melchior Langsdorff and Maria Margarethe Koch. His father was saltworks archivist and Hesse-Hanau "Rentmeister" (master of the bursary) (saltworks of
Nauheim ). He had a twin brother named Daniel Isaak. After finishing "Gymnasium" (secondary school) inIdstein in 1773, Langsdorf studied, among other things,philosophy ,law , andmathematics atGeorg-August University of Göttingen from 1774 until autumn of 1776 withAbraham Gotthelf Kästner and then until 1777 at theUniversity of Giessen . He then interned at the saltworks inSalzhausen , and subsequently devoted himself inNidda, Hesse to the study of saltworks. He finished his doctorate in 1781 inErfurt .In the summer semester of 1781, he was an outside lecturer at Giessen. For health reasons however, he decided against an academic career. He pursued a career in administration and became "Rentmeister" and land judge in Mülheim an der Ruhr. Starting in 1784, he was active as a saltworks inspector in
Gerabronn (nearRothenburg ob der Tauber ), which belonged to the margravate of Ansbach at the time.In 1798, he was given a full professorship in mechanical engineering at Erlangen. He taught there until 1804 and he subjected the 15-year old
Georg Ohm to a thorough examination of his knowledge of mathematics. Ohm and his younger brother were instructed in mathematics by their father.He refused an offer from Heidelberg in 1803 and accepted an offer to teach mathematics and technology at
Vilnius University . In Russia, he and his family were elevated into the hereditary aristocracy [Volk (1934), p. 11.] . In 1806, he returned with the aristocratic descriptorvon and became (with the help of his older brother Gottlieb, the governor ofDilsburg ) full professor in Heidelberg.The mathematical physics class of the
Bavarian Academy of Sciences admitted him to its ranks as a non-local member in 1808. Langsdorf left the University of Erlangen in early 1809 to take up a post in the University of Heidelberg.Langsdorf was also very interested in theological questions and published several works on this topic.
His brother, Johann Wilhelm, made a name for himself as a specialist in the area of saltworks engineering.
References
tudents
*
Martin Ohm
*Christian Ernst Wendt Selected works
"In German"
* "Erläuterungen der Kästnerschen Analysis endlicher Größen", 1776–1777
* "Drey oekonomisch-physikalisch-mathematische Abhandlungen", 1785
* "Physisch-mathematische Abhandlungen über Gegenstände der Wärmelehre", 1796
* "Handbuch der Maschinenlehre für Praktiker und akademische Lehrer", 1797
* "Lehrbuch der Hydraulik mit beständiger Rücksicht auf die Erfahrung", 1794–1796
* "Der Strumpfwirkerstuhl und sein Gebrauch", 1805
* "Erläuterung höchstwichtiger Lehren der Technologie", 1807
* "Principia calculi differentialis a fundamentis novis iisque solidioribus deducta" (= "Neue und gründlichere Darstellung der Prinzipien der Differentialrechnung"), 1807
* "Über Newtons, Eulers, Kästners und Konsorten Pfuschereien in der Mathematik", 1807
* "Arithmetische Abhandlungen über juristische, staats- und forstwirthschaftliche Fragen, Mortalität, Bevölkerung und chronologische Bestimmungen", 1810Literature
"In German"
*Walter Volk: "Karl Christian von Langsdorf", Philippsburg i.B. 1934; his life and works.
*Dagmar Drüll: "Carl Christian Langsdorf", Heidelberger Gelehrtenlexikon, Vol. 2, Heidelberg 1803–1932, 1986; p. 155–156.
* ADB, Entry on Georg Simon Ohm, Vol. 24, p. 187.
* ADB: Günther: "Karl Christian von Langsdorf", Vol. 17, p. 691–692.External links
* [http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=47025 Karl Christian von Langsdorf] at the
Mathematics Genealogy Project
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