Friedrich Julius Richelot

Summary

Friedrich Julius Richelot (6 November 1808 – 31 March 1875) was a German mathematician, born in Königsberg. He was a student of Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi.

Friedrich Julius Richelot
Portrait on Richelot's tombstone
Born(1808-11-06)6 November 1808
Died31 March 1875(1875-03-31) (aged 66)
Königsberg, Prussia
NationalityPrussian
Alma materUniversity of Königsberg
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Königsberg
Doctoral advisorCarl Gustav Jacob Jacobi
Doctoral studentsCarl Neumann
Heinrich Schröter

He was promoted in 1831 at the Philosophical Faculty of the University of Königsberg with a dissertation on the division of the circle into 257 equal parts (see references) and was a professor there.

Richelot authored numerous publications in German, French and Latin, among them — with his 1832 dissertation — the first known guide to the Euclidean construction of the regular 257-gon with compass and straightedge.

In 1825, he joined the Corps Masovia.[1]

He died in Königsberg in 1875.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kösener Korps-Listen 1910, 141, 8

Thesis edit

  • Friedrich Julius Richelot: De resolutione algebraica aequationis x257 = 1, sive de divisione circuli per bisectionem anguli septies repetitam in partes 257 inter se aequales commentatio coronata. In: Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik. Nr. 9, 1832, S. 1–26, 146–161, 209–230, und 337–358.