fbpx
Wikipedia

International Congress of Mathematicians

The International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM) is the largest conference for the topic of mathematics. It meets once every four years, hosted by the International Mathematical Union (IMU).

International Congress of Mathematicians
StatusActive
GenreMathematics conference
FrequencyQuadrennial
CountryVaries
Years active1897–present
Inaugurated9 August 1897; 126 years ago (1897-08-09)[1]
Founders
Most recent6–14 July 2022
Previous event2022
Next event22–29 July 2026
ActivityActive
Websitemathunion.org/icm

The Fields Medals, the IMU Abacus Medal (known before 2022 as the Nevanlinna Prize), the Gauss Prize, and the Chern Medal are awarded during the congress's opening ceremony. Each congress is memorialized by a printed set of Proceedings recording academic papers based on invited talks intended to be relevant to current topics of general interest. Being invited to talk at the ICM has been called "the equivalent ... of an induction to a hall of fame".[2]

History edit

 
Felix Klein (1849–1925)
 
Georg Cantor (1845–1918)
 
The 1932 International Congress of Mathematicians in Zürich, Switzerland

German mathematicians Felix Klein and Georg Cantor are credited with putting forward the idea of an international congress of mathematicians in the 1890s.[3][4]

The University of Chicago, which had opened in 1892, organized an International Mathematical Congress at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893, where Felix Klein participated as the official German representative.[5]

The first official International Congress of Mathematicians was held in Zürich in August 1897.[6] The organizers included such prominent mathematicians as Luigi Cremona, Felix Klein, Gösta Mittag-Leffler, Andrey Markov, and others.[7] The congress was attended by 208 mathematicians from 16 countries, including more than 100 from Switzerland or Germany, around 20 from each of France, Italy, and Austria-Hungary, 13 from the Russian Empire and 7 from the US.[4] Only four were women: Iginia Massarini, Vera Schiff [ru], Charlotte Scott, and Charlotte Wedell.[8]

During the 1900 congress in Paris, France, David Hilbert announced his famous list of 23 unsolved mathematical problems, now termed Hilbert's problems. Moritz Cantor and Vito Volterra gave the two plenary lectures at the start of the congress.[9]

At the 1904 ICM Gyula Kőnig delivered a lecture where he claimed that Georg Cantor's famous continuum hypothesis was false. An error in Kőnig's proof was discovered by Ernst Zermelo soon thereafter. Kőnig's announcement at the congress caused considerable uproar, and Klein had to personally explain to the Grand Duke of Baden (who was a financial sponsor of the congress) what could cause such an unrest among mathematicians.[10]

During the 1912 congress in Cambridge, England, Edmund Landau listed four basic problems about prime numbers, now called Landau's problems. The 1924 congress in Toronto was organized by John Charles Fields, initiator of the Fields Medal; it included a roundtrip railway excursion to Vancouver and ferry to Victoria. The first two Fields Medals were awarded at the 1936 ICM in Oslo.[10]

In the aftermath of World War I, at the insistence of the Allied Powers, the 1920 ICM in Strasbourg and the 1924 ICM in Toronto excluded mathematicians from the countries formerly part of the Central Powers. This resulted in a still unresolved controversy as to whether to count the Strasbourg and Toronto congresses as true ICMs. At the opening of the 1932 ICM in Zürich, Hermann Weyl said: "We attend here to an extraordinary improbable event. For the number of n, corresponding to the just opened International Congress of Mathematicians, we have the inequality 7 ≤ n ≤ 9; unfortunately our axiomatic foundations are not sufficient to give a more precise statement”.[10] As a consequence of this controversy, from the 1932 Zürich congress onward, the ICMs are not numbered.[10]

For the 1950 ICM in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Laurent Schwartz, one of the Fields Medalists for that year, and Jacques Hadamard, both of whom were viewed by the U.S. authorities as communist sympathizers, were only able to obtain U.S. visas after the personal intervention of President Harry Truman.[11][12]

The first woman to give an ICM plenary lecture, at the 1932 congress in Zürich, was Emmy Noether.[13] The second ICM plenary talk by a woman was delivered 58 years later, at the 1990 ICM in Kyoto, by Karen Uhlenbeck.[14]

The 1998 congress was attended by 3,346 participants. The American Mathematical Society reported that more than 4,500 participants attended the 2006 conference in Madrid, Spain. The King of Spain presided over the 2006 conference opening ceremony. The 2010 Congress took place in Hyderabad, India, on August 19–27, 2010. The ICM 2014 2014-12-29 at the Wayback Machine was held in Seoul, South Korea, on August 13–21, 2014. The took place in Rio de Janeiro on August 1–9, 2018.

ICMs and the International Mathematical Union edit

The organizing committees of the early ICMs were formed in large part on an ad hoc basis and there was no single body continuously overseeing the ICMs. Following the end of World War I, the Allied Powers established in 1919 in Brussels the International Research Council (IRC). At the IRC's instructions, in 1920 the Union Mathematique Internationale (UMI) was created.[10] This was the immediate predecessor of the current International Mathematical Union. Under the IRC's pressure, UMI reassigned the 1920 congress from Stockholm to Strasbourg and insisted on the rule which excluded from the congress mathematicians representing the former Central Powers. The exclusion rule, which also applied to the 1924 ICM, turned out to be quite unpopular among mathematicians from the U.S. and Great Britain. The 1924 ICM was originally scheduled to be held in New York, but had to be moved to Toronto after the American Mathematical Society withdrew its invitation to host the congress, in protest against the exclusion rule.[4] As a result of the exclusion rule and the protests it generated, the 1920 and the 1924 ICMs were considerably smaller than the previous ones. In the run-up to the 1928 ICM in Bologna, IRC and UMI still insisted on applying the exclusion rule. In the face of the protests against the exclusion rule and the possibility of a boycott of the congress by the American Mathematical Society and the London Mathematical Society, the congress's organizers decided to hold the 1928 ICM under the auspices of the University of Bologna rather than of the UMI.[10] The 1928 congress and all the subsequent congresses have been open for participation by mathematicians of all countries. The statutes of the UMI expired in 1931 and at the 1932 ICM in Zürich a decision to dissolve the UMI was made, largely in opposition to IRC's pressure on the UMI.[10]

At the 1950 ICM the participants voted to reconstitute the International Mathematical Union (IMU), which was formally established in 1951. Starting with the 1954 congress in Amsterdam, the ICMs are held under the auspices of the IMU.

Soviet participation edit

 
The Soviet commemorative stamp for the 1966 Congress in Moscow

The Soviet Union sent 27 participants to the 1928 ICM in Bologna and 10 participants to the 1932 ICM in Zürich.[13] No Soviet mathematicians participated in the 1936 ICM, although a number of invitations were extended to them. At the 1950 ICM there were again no participants from the Soviet Union, although quite a few were invited. Similarly, no representatives of other Eastern Bloc countries, except for Yugoslavia, participated in the 1950 congress. Andrey Kolmogorov had been appointed to the Fields Medal selection committee for the 1950 congress, but did not participate in the committee's work. However, in a famous episode, a few days before the end of the 1950 ICM, the congress' organizers received a telegram from Sergei Vavilov, President of the USSR Academy of Sciences. The telegram thanked the organizers for inviting Soviet mathematicians but said that they are unable to attend "being very much occupied with their regular work", and wished success to the congress's participants.[15] Vavilov's message was seen as a hopeful sign for the future ICMs and the situation improved further after Joseph Stalin's death in 1953. The Soviet Union was represented by five mathematicians at the 1954 ICM in Amsterdam, and several other Eastern Bloc countries sent their representatives as well. In 1957 the USSR joined the International Mathematical Union and the participation in subsequent ICMs by the Soviet and other Eastern Bloc scientists returned to more normal levels.[15] However, even after 1957, tensions between ICM organizers and the Soviet side persisted. Soviet mathematicians invited to attend the ICMs routinely experienced difficulties with obtaining exit visas from the Soviet Union and were often unable to come. Thus of the 41 invited speakers from the USSR for the 1974 ICM in Vancouver, only 20 actually arrived.[4] Grigory Margulis, who was awarded the Fields Medal at 1978 ICM in Helsinki, was not granted an exit visa and was unable to attend the 1978 congress.[4][16] Another, related, point of contention was the jurisdiction over Fields Medals for Soviet mathematicians. After 1978 the Soviet Union put forward a demand that the USSR Academy of Sciences approve all Soviet candidates for the Fields Medal, before it was awarded to them.[4][16] However, the IMU insisted that the decisions regarding invited speakers and Fields medalists be kept under exclusive jurisdiction of the ICM committees appointed for that purpose by the IMU.[4][16]

List of Congresses edit

Year City Country
2026 Philadelphia   United States
2022 Helsinki Online event[a]
2018 Rio de Janeiro   Brazil
2014 Seoul   South Korea
2010 Hyderabad   India
2006 Madrid   Spain
2002 Beijing   China
1998 Berlin   Germany
1994 Zürich   Switzerland
1990 Kyoto   Japan
1986 Berkeley   United States
1982 (met during 1983) Warsaw   Poland
1978 Helsinki   Finland
1974 Vancouver   Canada
1970 Nice   France
1966 Moscow   Soviet Union
1962 Stockholm   Sweden
1958 Edinburgh   United Kingdom
1954 Amsterdam   Netherlands
1950 Cambridge, Massachusetts   United States
1936 Oslo   Norway
1932 Zürich   Switzerland
1928 Bologna   Italy
1924 Toronto   Canada
1920 Strasbourg   France
1912 Cambridge   United Kingdom
1908 Rome   Italy
1904 Heidelberg   German Empire
1900 Paris   France
1897 Zürich   Switzerland
  1. ^ Originally planned to be in Saint Petersburg, Russia, but was moved online following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. The IMU General Assembly took place in Helsinki, Finland, in early July, 2022.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The International Congress of Mathematicians". Nature. 56 (1452). Nature Publishing Group: 395. 1897. Bibcode:1897Natur..56Q.395.. doi:10.1038/056395a0.
  2. ^ Castelvecchi, Davide (7 October 2015). "The biggest mystery in mathematics: Shinichi Mochizuki and the impenetrable proof". Nature. 526 (7572): 178–181. Bibcode:2015Natur.526..178C. doi:10.1038/526178a. PMID 26450038. S2CID 4403935.
  3. ^ The International Mathematical Union and The ICM Congresses. 2021-02-23 at the Wayback Machine www.icm2006.org. Accessed December 23, 2009.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g A. John Coleman. "Mathematics without borders": a book review. CMS Notes, vol 31, no. 3, April 1999, pp. 3–5
  5. ^ Case, Bettye Anne, ed. (1996). "Come to the Fair: The Chicago Mathematical Congress of 1893 by David E. Rowe and Karen Hunger Parshall". A Century of Mathematical Meetings. American Mathematical Society. p. 65. ISBN 9780821804650.
  6. ^ C., Bruno, Leonard (2003) [1999]. Math and mathematicians : the history of math discoveries around the world. Baker, Lawrence W. Detroit, Mich.: U X L. pp. 56. ISBN 0787638137. OCLC 41497065.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ In the section Vorgeschichte des Kongresses (prehistory of the congress) of the 1st ICM proceedings, 21 prominent organizers were cited: Hermann Bleuler, Heinrich Burkhardt, Luigi Cremona, Gustave Dumas, Jérôme Franel, Carl Friedrich Geiser, Alfred George Greenhill, Albin Herzog, George William Hill, Adolf Hurwitz, Felix Klein, Andrey Markov, Franz Mertens, Hermann Minkowski, Gösta Mittag-Leffler, Gabriel Oltramare, Henri Poincaré, Johann Jakob Rebstein, Ferdinand Rudio, Karl von der Mühll, and Heinrich Friedrich Weber. (See: Rudio, F., ed. (1898). Verhandlungen des ersten Internationalen Kongresses in Zürich vom 9. bis 11. August 1897. ICM proceedings. BG Teubner. p. 6.)
  8. ^ Curbera (2009), p. 16.
  9. ^ Scott, Charlotte Angas (1900). "The International Congress of Mathematicians in Paris" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 7 (2): 57–79. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1900-00768-3.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g G. Curbera. ICM through history. Newsletter of the European Mathematical Society, no. 63, March 2007, pp. 16–21. Accessed December 23, 2009.
  11. ^ Vladimir Maz'ya, Tatyana Shaposhnikova. Jacques Hadamard: a universal mathematician. American Mathematical Society, 1999. ISBN 0-8218-1923-2; p. 271
  12. ^ Michèle Audin, Correspondance entre Henri Cartan et André Weil (1928–1991), Documents Mathématiques 6, Société Mathématique de France, 2011, pp. 259–313
  13. ^ a b Guillermo Curbera. Mathematicians of the World, Unite!: The International Congress of Mathematicians: A Human Endeavor AK Peters, 2009. ISBN 1-56881-330-9; pp. 95–96
  14. ^ Sylvia Wiegand. Report on the Berlin ICM. AWM Newsletter, 28(6), November–December 1998, pp. 3–8
  15. ^ a b Guillermo Curbera. Mathematicians of the World, Unite!: The International Congress of Mathematicians: A Human Endeavor AK Peters, 2009. ISBN 1-56881-330-9; pp 149–150.
  16. ^ a b c Olli Lehto. Mathematics without borders: a history of the International Mathematical Union. Springer-Verlag, 1998. ISBN 0-387-98358-9; pp. 205–206
  17. ^ "Decision of the Executive Committee of the IMU on the upcoming ICM 2022 and IMU General Assembly" (PDF).

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • International Mathematical Congress: held in connection with the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago
  • International Mathematical Union: Proceedings 1893–2014
  • ICM 2010
  • ICM 2022

international, congress, mathematicians, largest, conference, topic, mathematics, meets, once, every, four, years, hosted, international, mathematical, union, statusactivegenremathematics, conferencefrequencyquadrennialcountryvariesyears, active1897, presentin. The International Congress of Mathematicians ICM is the largest conference for the topic of mathematics It meets once every four years hosted by the International Mathematical Union IMU International Congress of MathematiciansStatusActiveGenreMathematics conferenceFrequencyQuadrennialCountryVariesYears active1897 presentInaugurated9 August 1897 126 years ago 1897 08 09 1 FoundersFelix KleinGeorg CantorMost recent6 14 July 2022Previous event2022Next event22 29 July 2026ActivityActiveWebsitemathunion org icm The Fields Medals the IMU Abacus Medal known before 2022 as the Nevanlinna Prize the Gauss Prize and the Chern Medal are awarded during the congress s opening ceremony Each congress is memorialized by a printed set of Proceedings recording academic papers based on invited talks intended to be relevant to current topics of general interest Being invited to talk at the ICM has been called the equivalent of an induction to a hall of fame 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 ICMs and the International Mathematical Union 1 2 Soviet participation 2 List of Congresses 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp Felix Klein 1849 1925 nbsp Georg Cantor 1845 1918 nbsp The 1932 International Congress of Mathematicians in Zurich Switzerland German mathematicians Felix Klein and Georg Cantor are credited with putting forward the idea of an international congress of mathematicians in the 1890s 3 4 The University of Chicago which had opened in 1892 organized an International Mathematical Congress at the Chicago World s Fair in 1893 where Felix Klein participated as the official German representative 5 The first official International Congress of Mathematicians was held in Zurich in August 1897 6 The organizers included such prominent mathematicians as Luigi Cremona Felix Klein Gosta Mittag Leffler Andrey Markov and others 7 The congress was attended by 208 mathematicians from 16 countries including more than 100 from Switzerland or Germany around 20 from each of France Italy and Austria Hungary 13 from the Russian Empire and 7 from the US 4 Only four were women Iginia Massarini Vera Schiff ru Charlotte Scott and Charlotte Wedell 8 During the 1900 congress in Paris France David Hilbert announced his famous list of 23 unsolved mathematical problems now termed Hilbert s problems Moritz Cantor and Vito Volterra gave the two plenary lectures at the start of the congress 9 At the 1904 ICM Gyula Konig delivered a lecture where he claimed that Georg Cantor s famous continuum hypothesis was false An error in Konig s proof was discovered by Ernst Zermelo soon thereafter Konig s announcement at the congress caused considerable uproar and Klein had to personally explain to the Grand Duke of Baden who was a financial sponsor of the congress what could cause such an unrest among mathematicians 10 During the 1912 congress in Cambridge England Edmund Landau listed four basic problems about prime numbers now called Landau s problems The 1924 congress in Toronto was organized by John Charles Fields initiator of the Fields Medal it included a roundtrip railway excursion to Vancouver and ferry to Victoria The first two Fields Medals were awarded at the 1936 ICM in Oslo 10 In the aftermath of World War I at the insistence of the Allied Powers the 1920 ICM in Strasbourg and the 1924 ICM in Toronto excluded mathematicians from the countries formerly part of the Central Powers This resulted in a still unresolved controversy as to whether to count the Strasbourg and Toronto congresses as true ICMs At the opening of the 1932 ICM in Zurich Hermann Weyl said We attend here to an extraordinary improbable event For the number of n corresponding to the just opened International Congress of Mathematicians we have the inequality 7 n 9 unfortunately our axiomatic foundations are not sufficient to give a more precise statement 10 As a consequence of this controversy from the 1932 Zurich congress onward the ICMs are not numbered 10 For the 1950 ICM in Cambridge Massachusetts Laurent Schwartz one of the Fields Medalists for that year and Jacques Hadamard both of whom were viewed by the U S authorities as communist sympathizers were only able to obtain U S visas after the personal intervention of President Harry Truman 11 12 The first woman to give an ICM plenary lecture at the 1932 congress in Zurich was Emmy Noether 13 The second ICM plenary talk by a woman was delivered 58 years later at the 1990 ICM in Kyoto by Karen Uhlenbeck 14 The 1998 congress was attended by 3 346 participants The American Mathematical Society reported that more than 4 500 participants attended the 2006 conference in Madrid Spain The King of Spain presided over the 2006 conference opening ceremony The 2010 Congress took place in Hyderabad India on August 19 27 2010 The ICM 2014 Archived 2014 12 29 at the Wayback Machine was held in Seoul South Korea on August 13 21 2014 The 2018 Congress took place in Rio de Janeiro on August 1 9 2018 ICMs and the International Mathematical Union edit The organizing committees of the early ICMs were formed in large part on an ad hoc basis and there was no single body continuously overseeing the ICMs Following the end of World War I the Allied Powers established in 1919 in Brussels the International Research Council IRC At the IRC s instructions in 1920 the Union Mathematique Internationale UMI was created 10 This was the immediate predecessor of the current International Mathematical Union Under the IRC s pressure UMI reassigned the 1920 congress from Stockholm to Strasbourg and insisted on the rule which excluded from the congress mathematicians representing the former Central Powers The exclusion rule which also applied to the 1924 ICM turned out to be quite unpopular among mathematicians from the U S and Great Britain The 1924 ICM was originally scheduled to be held in New York but had to be moved to Toronto after the American Mathematical Society withdrew its invitation to host the congress in protest against the exclusion rule 4 As a result of the exclusion rule and the protests it generated the 1920 and the 1924 ICMs were considerably smaller than the previous ones In the run up to the 1928 ICM in Bologna IRC and UMI still insisted on applying the exclusion rule In the face of the protests against the exclusion rule and the possibility of a boycott of the congress by the American Mathematical Society and the London Mathematical Society the congress s organizers decided to hold the 1928 ICM under the auspices of the University of Bologna rather than of the UMI 10 The 1928 congress and all the subsequent congresses have been open for participation by mathematicians of all countries The statutes of the UMI expired in 1931 and at the 1932 ICM in Zurich a decision to dissolve the UMI was made largely in opposition to IRC s pressure on the UMI 10 At the 1950 ICM the participants voted to reconstitute the International Mathematical Union IMU which was formally established in 1951 Starting with the 1954 congress in Amsterdam the ICMs are held under the auspices of the IMU Soviet participation edit nbsp The Soviet commemorative stamp for the 1966 Congress in Moscow The Soviet Union sent 27 participants to the 1928 ICM in Bologna and 10 participants to the 1932 ICM in Zurich 13 No Soviet mathematicians participated in the 1936 ICM although a number of invitations were extended to them At the 1950 ICM there were again no participants from the Soviet Union although quite a few were invited Similarly no representatives of other Eastern Bloc countries except for Yugoslavia participated in the 1950 congress Andrey Kolmogorov had been appointed to the Fields Medal selection committee for the 1950 congress but did not participate in the committee s work However in a famous episode a few days before the end of the 1950 ICM the congress organizers received a telegram from Sergei Vavilov President of the USSR Academy of Sciences The telegram thanked the organizers for inviting Soviet mathematicians but said that they are unable to attend being very much occupied with their regular work and wished success to the congress s participants 15 Vavilov s message was seen as a hopeful sign for the future ICMs and the situation improved further after Joseph Stalin s death in 1953 The Soviet Union was represented by five mathematicians at the 1954 ICM in Amsterdam and several other Eastern Bloc countries sent their representatives as well In 1957 the USSR joined the International Mathematical Union and the participation in subsequent ICMs by the Soviet and other Eastern Bloc scientists returned to more normal levels 15 However even after 1957 tensions between ICM organizers and the Soviet side persisted Soviet mathematicians invited to attend the ICMs routinely experienced difficulties with obtaining exit visas from the Soviet Union and were often unable to come Thus of the 41 invited speakers from the USSR for the 1974 ICM in Vancouver only 20 actually arrived 4 Grigory Margulis who was awarded the Fields Medal at 1978 ICM in Helsinki was not granted an exit visa and was unable to attend the 1978 congress 4 16 Another related point of contention was the jurisdiction over Fields Medals for Soviet mathematicians After 1978 the Soviet Union put forward a demand that the USSR Academy of Sciences approve all Soviet candidates for the Fields Medal before it was awarded to them 4 16 However the IMU insisted that the decisions regarding invited speakers and Fields medalists be kept under exclusive jurisdiction of the ICM committees appointed for that purpose by the IMU 4 16 List of Congresses editYear City Country 2026 Philadelphia nbsp United States 2022 Helsinki Online event a 2018 Rio de Janeiro nbsp Brazil 2014 Seoul nbsp South Korea 2010 Hyderabad nbsp India 2006 Madrid nbsp Spain 2002 Beijing nbsp China 1998 Berlin nbsp Germany 1994 Zurich nbsp Switzerland 1990 Kyoto nbsp Japan 1986 Berkeley nbsp United States 1982 met during 1983 Warsaw nbsp Poland 1978 Helsinki nbsp Finland 1974 Vancouver nbsp Canada 1970 Nice nbsp France 1966 Moscow nbsp Soviet Union 1962 Stockholm nbsp Sweden 1958 Edinburgh nbsp United Kingdom 1954 Amsterdam nbsp Netherlands 1950 Cambridge Massachusetts nbsp United States 1936 Oslo nbsp Norway 1932 Zurich nbsp Switzerland 1928 Bologna nbsp Italy 1924 Toronto nbsp Canada 1920 Strasbourg nbsp France 1912 Cambridge nbsp United Kingdom 1908 Rome nbsp Italy 1904 Heidelberg nbsp German Empire 1900 Paris nbsp France 1897 Zurich nbsp Switzerland Originally planned to be in Saint Petersburg Russia but was moved online following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine The IMU General Assembly took place in Helsinki Finland in early July 2022 17 See also editList of International Congresses of Mathematicians Plenary and Invited SpeakersReferences edit The International Congress of Mathematicians Nature 56 1452 Nature Publishing Group 395 1897 Bibcode 1897Natur 56Q 395 doi 10 1038 056395a0 Castelvecchi Davide 7 October 2015 The biggest mystery in mathematics Shinichi Mochizuki and the impenetrable proof Nature 526 7572 178 181 Bibcode 2015Natur 526 178C doi 10 1038 526178a PMID 26450038 S2CID 4403935 The International Mathematical Union and The ICM Congresses Archived 2021 02 23 at the Wayback Machine www icm2006 org Accessed December 23 2009 a b c d e f g A John Coleman Mathematics without borders a book review CMS Notes vol 31 no 3 April 1999 pp 3 5 Case Bettye Anne ed 1996 Come to the Fair The Chicago Mathematical Congress of 1893 by David E Rowe and Karen Hunger Parshall A Century of Mathematical Meetings American Mathematical Society p 65 ISBN 9780821804650 C Bruno Leonard 2003 1999 Math and mathematicians the history of math discoveries around the world Baker Lawrence W Detroit Mich U X L pp 56 ISBN 0787638137 OCLC 41497065 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link In the section Vorgeschichte des Kongresses prehistory of the congress of the 1st ICM proceedings 21 prominent organizers were cited Hermann Bleuler Heinrich Burkhardt Luigi Cremona Gustave Dumas Jerome Franel Carl Friedrich Geiser Alfred George Greenhill Albin Herzog George William Hill Adolf Hurwitz Felix Klein Andrey Markov Franz Mertens Hermann Minkowski Gosta Mittag Leffler Gabriel Oltramare Henri Poincare Johann Jakob Rebstein Ferdinand Rudio Karl von der Muhll and Heinrich Friedrich Weber See Rudio F ed 1898 Verhandlungen des ersten Internationalen Kongresses in Zurich vom 9 bis 11 August 1897 ICM proceedings BG Teubner p 6 Curbera 2009 p 16 Scott Charlotte Angas 1900 The International Congress of Mathematicians in Paris PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 7 2 57 79 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1900 00768 3 a b c d e f g G Curbera ICM through history Newsletter of the European Mathematical Society no 63 March 2007 pp 16 21 Accessed December 23 2009 Vladimir Maz ya Tatyana Shaposhnikova Jacques Hadamard a universal mathematician American Mathematical Society 1999 ISBN 0 8218 1923 2 p 271 Michele Audin Correspondance entre Henri Cartan et Andre Weil 1928 1991 Documents Mathematiques 6 Societe Mathematique de France 2011 pp 259 313 a b Guillermo Curbera Mathematicians of the World Unite The International Congress of Mathematicians A Human Endeavor AK Peters 2009 ISBN 1 56881 330 9 pp 95 96 Sylvia Wiegand Report on the Berlin ICM AWM Newsletter 28 6 November December 1998 pp 3 8 a b Guillermo Curbera Mathematicians of the World Unite The International Congress of Mathematicians A Human Endeavor AK Peters 2009 ISBN 1 56881 330 9 pp 149 150 a b c Olli Lehto Mathematics without borders a history of the International Mathematical Union Springer Verlag 1998 ISBN 0 387 98358 9 pp 205 206 Decision of the Executive Committee of the IMU on the upcoming ICM 2022 and IMU General Assembly PDF Further reading editGuillermo Curbera Mathematicians of the World Unite The International Congress of Mathematicians A Human Endeavor AK Peters 2009 ISBN 1 56881 330 9 Olli Lehto Mathematics without borders a history of the International Mathematical Union Springer Verlag 1998 ISBN 0 387 98358 9 Donald J Albers Gerald L Alexanderson Constance Reid International Mathematical Congresses An Illustrated History 1893 1986 Springer Verlag 1986 ISBN 0 387 96409 6 Yousef Alavi Peter Hilton and Jean Pedersen Let s Meet at the Congress American Mathematical Monthly Vol 93 No 1 Jan 1986 pp 3 8External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works on the topic International Congress of Mathematicians nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to International Congress of Mathematicians International Mathematical Congress held in connection with the World s Columbian Exposition Chicago International Mathematical Union Proceedings 1893 2014 ICM 1998 ICM 2002 ICM 2006 ICM 2010 ICM 2014 ICM 2018 ICM 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Congress of Mathematicians amp oldid 1220204401, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.