Vsevolod Ivanovich Romanovsky

Academician V. I. Romanovsky

Vsevolod Ivanovich Romanovsky (Всеволод Иванович Романовский, 4 December 1879, Verny, Russian Empire – 6 December 1954) was a Russian-Soviet-Uzbek mathematician, founder of the Tashkent school of mathematics.

Education and career

While studying at St. Petersburg University

In 1906 Romanovsky received, under the supervision of A. A. Markov, his doctoral degree from St. Petersburg University. During 1900–1908 he was a student and then a docent at St. Petersburg University.[1][2] In 1911–1915 he was a senior lecturer and then professor at the Imperial University of Warsaw, in 1915–1918 a professor at the Imperial University of Warsaw in Rostov-on-Don, and from 1918 a professor of probability and mathematical statistics at what is now called the National University of Uzbekistan (in Tashkent). His doctoral students include Tashmukhamed Alievich Sarymsakov (Ташмухамед Алиевич Сарымсаков).[3]

Romanovsky gained an international reputation for his work in mathematical statistics and probability theory. In 1943 he was made an Academician of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic. The Uzbek Academy of Sciences' Romanovsky Institute of Mathematics is named in his honor. Romanovsky was an Invited Speaker at the ICM in 1928 in Bologna[4] and in 1932 in Zürich.

His body was buried in Tashkent in the Botkin cemetery.

Awards

Selected works

See also

References

  1. Thomas W. Hawkins Jr. (2013). "V. I. Romanovsky". The Mathematics of Frobenius in Context. p. 647.
  2. "Markov and the Creation of Markov Chains by Eugene Seneta, University of Sydney
  3. Tashmukhamed Alievich Sarymsakov at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. Romanovsky, V. I. (1928). "Sur la généralisation des courbes de Pearson" (PDF). Atti del Congresso Intern. dei Matematici: pp.107–110.
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