Charles Henry Rowe

Charles Henry Rowe (9 February 1893, Cork – 4 December 1943) was an Irish mathematician, specializing in geometry.[1]

Rowe received his bachelor's degree from University College Cork in 1914 and his M.A. in Mathematics and Philosophy from Trinity College, Dublin in 1917. He was a close friend of the mathematical physicist J. L. Synge.[2] By winning a competitive examination in 1920, Rowe became a Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin and retained the fellowship until his death. He spent the academic year 1920–1921 in Paris, where he studied under Hadamard, Lebesgue, and Goursat. At Trinity College Dublin, Rowe became in 1921 Donegal Lecturer in Mathematics[1] and, after a probationary period as an acting professor,[3] was appointed in 1926 to the Erasmus Smith Chair of mathematics, retaining the chair until his death.[1]

In 1932 he was an Invited Speaker of the ICM, with talk Subspaces associated with certain systems of curves in a Riemannian space, in 1932 in Zurich. The Rowe Prize of Trinity College, Dublin was established in 1959 by a bequest from his widow, Olive Marjorie Rowe.[4]

Selected publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 Semple, J. G. (1944). "Charles Henry Rowe". Journal of the London Mathematical Society. 19 (no. 76, Part 4): 241–244.
  2. McCartney, Mark; Whitaker, Andrew, eds. (2003). Physicists of Ireland: passion and precision. CRC Press. p. 212.
  3. The Dublin University Calendar for the Year 1922–1923. p. 448.
  4. "Scholarship Prizes and Financial Assistance, School of Mathematics, Trinity College Dublin".
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