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Paul Painlevé

Paul Painlevé (French: [pɔl pɛ̃ləve]; 5 December 1863 – 29 October 1933) was a French mathematician and statesman. He served twice as Prime Minister of the Third Republic: 12 September – 13 November 1917 and 17 April – 22 November 1925. His entry into politics came in 1906 after a professorship at the Sorbonne that began in 1892.

Paul Painlevé
Paul Painlevé in 1923
Prime Minister of France
In office
17 April 1925 – 28 November 1925
PresidentGaston Doumergue
Preceded byÉdouard Herriot
Succeeded byAristide Briand
In office
12 September 1917 – 16 November 1917
PresidentRaymond Poincaré
Preceded byAlexandre Ribot
Succeeded byGeorges Clemenceau
Minister of Air
In office
3 June 1932 – 29 January 1933
Prime MinisterÉdouard Herriot
Joseph Paul-Boncour
Preceded byJacques-Louis Dumesnil
Succeeded byPierre Cot
Minister of Finance
In office
29 October 1925 – 28 November 1925
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byJoseph Caillaux
Succeeded byLouis Loucheur
Minister of War
In office
17 April 1925 – 29 October 1925
Preceded byCharles Nollet
Succeeded byAndré Maginot
In office
20 March 1917 – 13 November 1917
Prime MinisterAlexandre Ribot
Himself
Preceded byLucien Lacaze
Succeeded byGeorges Clemenceau
President of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
9 June 1924 – 21 April 1925
Preceded byRaoul Péret
Succeeded byÉdouard Herriot
Personal details
Born5 December 1863
Paris
Died29 October 1933(1933-10-29) (aged 69)
Paris
Political partyPRS

His first term as prime minister lasted only nine weeks but dealt with weighty issues, such as the Russian Revolution, the American entry into the war, the failure of the Nivelle Offensive, quelling the French Army Mutinies and relations with the British. In the 1920s as Minister of War he was a key figure in building the Maginot Line.[1] In his second term as prime minister he dealt with the outbreak of rebellion in Syria's Jabal Druze in July 1925 which had excited public and parliamentary anxiety over the general crisis of France's empire.[2]

Biography edit

Early life edit

Painlevé was born in Paris.[3] Brought up within a family of skilled artisans (his father was a draughtsman) Painlevé showed early promise across the range of elementary studies and was initially attracted by either an engineering or political career. However, he finally entered the École Normale Supérieure in 1883 to study mathematics, receiving his doctorate in 1887 following a period of study at Göttingen, Germany with Felix Klein and Hermann Amandus Schwarz. Intending an academic career he became professor at Université de Lille, returning to Paris in 1892 to teach at the Sorbonne, École Polytechnique and later at the Collège de France and the École Normale Supérieure. He was elected a member of the Académie des Sciences in 1900.[3]

He married Marguerite Petit de Villeneuve in 1901. Marguerite died during the birth of their son Jean Painlevé in the following year.[3]

Painlevé's mathematical work on differential equations led him to encounter their application to the theory of flight and, as ever, his broad interest in engineering topics fostered an enthusiasm for the emerging field of aviation. In 1908, he became Wilbur Wright's first airplane passenger in France and in 1909 created the first university course in aeronautics.[3]

Mathematical work edit

 
Paul Painlevé as a young man

Some differential equations can be solved using elementary algebraic operations that involve the trigonometric and exponential functions (sometimes called elementary functions). Many interesting special functions arise as solutions of linear second order ordinary differential equations. Around the turn of the century, Painlevé, É. Picard, and B. Gambier showed that of the class of nonlinear second order ordinary differential equations with polynomial coefficients, those that possess a certain desirable technical property, shared by the linear equations (nowadays commonly referred to as the 'Painlevé property') can always be transformed into one of fifty canonical forms. Of these fifty equations, just six require 'new' transcendental functions for their solution.[4] These new transcendental functions, solving the remaining six equations, are called the Painlevé transcendents, and interest in them has revived recently due to their appearance in modern geometry, integrable systems[5] and statistical mechanics.[6][7][8]

In 1895 he gave a series of lectures at Stockholm University on differential equations, at the end stating the Painlevé conjecture about singularities of the n-body problem.[9] In the same year he published work on the Painlevé paradox, an apparent contradiction in simple models of friction.[10]

In the 1920s, Painlevé briefly turned his attention to the new theory of gravitation, general relativity, which had recently been introduced by Albert Einstein. In 1921, Painlevé proposed the Gullstrand–Painlevé coordinates for the Schwarzschild metric. The modification in the coordinate system was the first to reveal clearly that the Schwarzschild radius is a mere coordinate singularity (with however, profound global significance: it represents the event horizon of a black hole). This essential point was not generally appreciated by physicists until around 1963.[citation needed] In his diary, Harry Graf Kessler recorded that during a later visit to Berlin, Painlevé discussed pacifist international politics with Einstein, but there is no reference to discussions concerning the significance of the Schwarzschild radius.[11]

Early political career edit

Between 1915 and 1917, Painlevé served as French Minister for Public Instruction and Inventions. In December 1915, he requested a scientific exchange agreement between France and Britain, resulting in Anglo-French collaboration that ultimately led to the parallel development by Paul Langevin in France and Robert Boyle in Britain of the first active sonar.[12]

First period as French Prime Minister edit

Painlevé took his aviation interests, along with those in naval and military matters, with him when he became, in 1906, Deputy for Paris's 5th arrondissement, the so-called Latin Quarter. By 1910, he had vacated his academic posts and World War I led to his active participation in military committees, joining Aristide Briand's cabinet in 1915 as Minister for Public Instruction and Inventions.[3]

On his appointment as War Minister in March 1917 he was immediately called upon to give his approval, albeit with some misgivings, to Robert Georges Nivelle's wildly optimistic plans for a breakthrough offensive in Champagne. Painlevé reacted to the disastrous public failure of the plan by dismissing Nivelle and controversially replacing him with Henri Philippe Pétain.[13] He was also responsible for isolating the Russian Expeditionary Force in France in the La Courtine camp, located in a remote spot on the plateau of Millevaches.[14]

On 7 September 1917, Prime Minister Alexandre Ribot lost the support of the Socialists and Painlevé was called upon to form a new government.[3]

 
Autochrome portrait by Auguste Léon, 1918

Painlevé was a leading voice at the Rapallo conference that led to the establishment of the Supreme Allied Council, a consultative body of Allied powers that anticipated the unified Allied command finally established in the following year. He appointed Ferdinand Foch as French representative knowing that he was the natural Allied commander. On Painlevé's return to Paris he was defeated and resigned on 13 November 1917 to be succeeded by Georges Clemenceau. Foch was finally named Allied generalissimo in March 1918, eventually becoming commander-in-chief of all Allied armies on the Western and Italian fronts.[3][13][15]

Second period as French Prime Minister edit

Painlevé then played little active role in politics until the election of November 1919 when he emerged as a leftist critic of the right-wing Bloc National. By the time the next election approached in May 1924 his collaboration with Édouard Herriot, a fellow member of Briand's 1915 cabinet, had led to the formation of the Cartel des Gauches. Winning the election, Herriot became Prime Minister in June, while Painlevé became President of the Chamber of Deputies. Though Painlevé ran for President of France in 1924 he was defeated by Gaston Doumergue. Herriot's administration publicly recognised the Soviet Union, accepted the Dawes Plan and agreed to evacuate the Ruhr. However, a financial crisis arose from the ensuing devaluation of the franc and in April 1925, Herriot fell and Painlevé became Prime Minister for a second time on 17 April. Unfortunately, he was unable to offer convincing remedies for the financial problems and was forced to resign on 21 November.[3][13][16]

 
Paul Painlevé in the 1920s

Later political career edit

Following Painlevé's resignation, Briand formed a new government with Painlevé as Minister for War. Though Briand was defeated by Raymond Poincaré in 1926, Painlevé continued in office. Poincaré stabilised the franc with a return to the gold standard, but ultimately acceded power to Briand.[3] During his tenure as Minister of War, Painlevé was instrumental in the creation of the Maginot Line. This line of military fortifications along France's Eastern border was largely designed by Painlevé, yet named for André Maginot, owing to Maginot's championing of public support and funding.[citation needed] Painlevé remained in office as Minister for War until July 1929.[3]

From 1925 to 1933, Painlevé represented France in the International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation of the League of Nations (he replaced Henri Bergson and was himself replaced by Édouard Herriot).[17]

Though he was proposed for President of France in 1932, Painlevé withdrew before the election. He became Minister of Air later that year, making proposals for an international treaty to ban the manufacture of bomber aircraft and to establish an international air force to enforce global peace. On the fall of the government in January 1933, his political career ended.[3]

Painlevé died in Paris in October of the same year.[13] On 4 November, after a eulogy by Prime Minister Albert Sarraut, he was interred in the Panthéon.[18]

Honours edit

Composition of governments edit

Painlevé's First Government, 12 September – 16 November 1917 edit

Changes

Painlevé's Second Ministry, 17 April – 29 October 1925 edit

Changes

  • 11 October 1925 – Anatole de Monzie succeeded Steeg as Minister of Justice. Yvon Delbos succeeded Monzie as Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts.

Painlevé's Third Ministry, 29 October – 28 November 1925 edit

Works edit

  • Sur les lignes singulières des fonctions analytiques - 1887/On singular lines of analytic functions.
  • Mémoire sur les équations différentielles du premier ordre - 1892/Memory on first order differential equations.
  • Leçons sur la théorie analytique des équations différentielles, A. Hermann (Paris), 1897/A course on analytic theory of differential equations.
  • Leçons sur les fonctions de variables réelles et les développements en séries de polynômes - 1905/A course on real variable functions and polynomial development series.
  • Cours de mécanique et machines (Paris), 1907/A course on mechanics and machines.
  • Cours de mécanique et machines 2 (Paris), 1908/A course on mechanics and machines 2.
  • Leçons sur les fonctions définies par les équations différentielles du premier ordre, Gauthier-Villars (Paris), 1908/A course on functions defined by first order differential equations.
  • L'aéroplane, Lille, 1909/Aeroplane.
  • Cours de mécanique et machines (Paris), 1909/A course on mechanics and machines.
  • L'aviation, Paris, Felix Alcan, 1910/Aviation.
  • Les axiomes de la mécanique, examen critique; Note sur la propagation de la lumière - 1922/Mechanics axioms, a critical study; Notes on light spread.
  • Leçons sur la théorie analytique des équations différentielles, Hermann, Paris, 1897/A course on analytical theory of differential equations.
  • Trois mémoires de Painlevé sur la relativité (1921-1922)/Painlevé's three memories on relativity.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Smart, Nick (1996). "The Maginot Line: An Indestructible Inheritance". International Journal of Heritage Studies. 2 (4): 222–233. doi:10.1080/13527259608722177.
  2. ^ Thomas, Martin (2005). "Albert Sarraut, French Colonial Development, and the Communist Threat, 1919–1930". Journal of Modern History. 77 (4): 917–955. doi:10.1086/499830. S2CID 146245219.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Paul Painlevé", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  4. ^ Painlevé, P. (1897). Leçons sur la théorie analytique des équations différentielles. Paris: Libraire Scientifique à Hermann.
  5. ^ Ablowitz, M. J. and Clarkson, P.A. (1991) Solitons, nonlinear evolution equations and inverse scattering. Cambridge University Press
  6. ^ Wu, T. T.; B. M. McCoy; C. A. Tracy; E. Barouch (1976). "Spin-spin correlation functions for the two-dimensional Ising model: Exact theory in the scaling region". Physical Review B. 13 (1): 316–374. Bibcode:1976PhRvB..13..316W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.13.316.
  7. ^ Jimbo, Michio; Tetsuji Miwa; Yasuko Môri; Mikio Sato (April 1980). "Density matrix of an impenetrable Bose gas and the fifth Painlevé transcendent". Physica D. 1 (1): 80–158. Bibcode:1980PhyD....1...80J. doi:10.1016/0167-2789(80)90006-8.
  8. ^ Tracy, C. A.; H. Widom (1997). "On Exact Solutions to the Cylindrical Poisson-Boltzmann Equation with Applications to Polyelectrolytes". Physica A. 244 (1–4): 402–413. arXiv:cond-mat/9701067. Bibcode:1997PhyA..244..402T. doi:10.1016/S0378-4371(97)00229-X. S2CID 5785882.
  9. ^ Diacu, Florin N. (1993). "Painlevé's Conjecture". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 13 (2): 6–12. doi:10.1007/BF03024186. S2CID 121592005.
  10. ^ Painlevé, Paul (1895). "Sur le lois frottement de glissemment". C. R. Acad. Sci. 121: 112–115.
  11. ^ Harry Graf Kessler. [Diary entry for Berlin 25 February 1925]. Projekt Gutenberg. Archived from the original on 5 August 2020.
  12. ^ Michael A. Ainslie Principles of Sonar Performance Modelling, Springer, 2010 ISBN 3-540-87661-8, page 13
  13. ^ a b c d "Paul Painlevé" in Encyclopædia Britannica
  14. ^ Cockfield, Jamie H. (1999). With snow on their boots : the tragic odyssey of the Russian Expeditionary Force in France during World War I (1st St. Martin's Griffin ed.). New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 137. ISBN 978-0312220822.
  15. ^ Keegan, John (2003). The First World War. UK: Random House. p. 403. ISBN 0-7126-8040-3.
  16. ^ "Édouard Herriot" in Encyclopædia Britannica
  17. ^ Grandjean, Martin (2018). Les réseaux de la coopération intellectuelle. La Société des Nations comme actrice des échanges scientifiques et culturels dans l'entre-deux-guerres [The Networks of Intellectual Cooperation. The League of Nations as an Actor of the Scientific and Cultural Exchanges in the Inter-War Period] (phdthesis) (in French). Lausanne: Université de Lausanne.
  18. ^ "Painlevé To Be Buried in Pantheon Today". The New York Times. 4 November 1933. p. 13. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
  19. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
  20. ^ Polmar, Norman; Genda, Minoru (2006). Aircraft Carriers: A History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on World Events. Washington, DC: Potomac Books, Inc. p. 86. ISBN 978-1-57488-664-1.
  21. ^ Schmadel, Lutz D.; International Astronomical Union (2003). Dictionary of minor planet names. Berlin; New York: Springer-Verlag. p. 84. ISBN 978-3-540-00238-3.

Further reading edit

  • Dutton, David (1981). "Paul Painlevé and the end of the sacred union in Wartime France". Journal of Strategic Studies. 4 (1): 46–59. doi:10.1080/01402398108437065.
  • Greenhalgh, Elizabeth (2011). "Paul Painlevé and Franco-British Relations in 1917". Contemporary British History. 25 (1): 5–27. doi:10.1080/13619462.2011.546094. S2CID 144569843.

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of France
1917
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of France
1925
Succeeded by

paul, painlevé, french, pɔl, ləve, december, 1863, october, 1933, french, mathematician, statesman, served, twice, prime, minister, third, republic, september, november, 1917, april, november, 1925, entry, into, politics, came, 1906, after, professorship, sorb. Paul Painleve French pɔl pɛ leve 5 December 1863 29 October 1933 was a French mathematician and statesman He served twice as Prime Minister of the Third Republic 12 September 13 November 1917 and 17 April 22 November 1925 His entry into politics came in 1906 after a professorship at the Sorbonne that began in 1892 Paul PainlevePaul Painleve in 1923Prime Minister of FranceIn office 17 April 1925 28 November 1925PresidentGaston DoumerguePreceded byEdouard HerriotSucceeded byAristide BriandIn office 12 September 1917 16 November 1917PresidentRaymond PoincarePreceded byAlexandre RibotSucceeded byGeorges ClemenceauMinister of AirIn office 3 June 1932 29 January 1933Prime MinisterEdouard HerriotJoseph Paul BoncourPreceded byJacques Louis DumesnilSucceeded byPierre CotMinister of FinanceIn office 29 October 1925 28 November 1925Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byJoseph CaillauxSucceeded byLouis LoucheurMinister of WarIn office 17 April 1925 29 October 1925Preceded byCharles NolletSucceeded byAndre MaginotIn office 20 March 1917 13 November 1917Prime MinisterAlexandre RibotHimselfPreceded byLucien LacazeSucceeded byGeorges ClemenceauPresident of the Chamber of DeputiesIn office 9 June 1924 21 April 1925Preceded byRaoul PeretSucceeded byEdouard HerriotPersonal detailsBorn5 December 1863ParisDied29 October 1933 1933 10 29 aged 69 ParisPolitical partyPRSHis first term as prime minister lasted only nine weeks but dealt with weighty issues such as the Russian Revolution the American entry into the war the failure of the Nivelle Offensive quelling the French Army Mutinies and relations with the British In the 1920s as Minister of War he was a key figure in building the Maginot Line 1 In his second term as prime minister he dealt with the outbreak of rebellion in Syria s Jabal Druze in July 1925 which had excited public and parliamentary anxiety over the general crisis of France s empire 2 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Mathematical work 1 3 Early political career 1 4 First period as French Prime Minister 1 5 Second period as French Prime Minister 1 6 Later political career 2 Honours 3 Composition of governments 3 1 Painleve s First Government 12 September 16 November 1917 3 2 Painleve s Second Ministry 17 April 29 October 1925 3 3 Painleve s Third Ministry 29 October 28 November 1925 4 Works 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Painleve was born in Paris 3 Brought up within a family of skilled artisans his father was a draughtsman Painleve showed early promise across the range of elementary studies and was initially attracted by either an engineering or political career However he finally entered the Ecole Normale Superieure in 1883 to study mathematics receiving his doctorate in 1887 following a period of study at Gottingen Germany with Felix Klein and Hermann Amandus Schwarz Intending an academic career he became professor at Universite de Lille returning to Paris in 1892 to teach at the Sorbonne Ecole Polytechnique and later at the College de France and the Ecole Normale Superieure He was elected a member of the Academie des Sciences in 1900 3 He married Marguerite Petit de Villeneuve in 1901 Marguerite died during the birth of their son Jean Painleve in the following year 3 Painleve s mathematical work on differential equations led him to encounter their application to the theory of flight and as ever his broad interest in engineering topics fostered an enthusiasm for the emerging field of aviation In 1908 he became Wilbur Wright s first airplane passenger in France and in 1909 created the first university course in aeronautics 3 Mathematical work edit nbsp Paul Painleve as a young manSome differential equations can be solved using elementary algebraic operations that involve the trigonometric and exponential functions sometimes called elementary functions Many interesting special functions arise as solutions of linear second order ordinary differential equations Around the turn of the century Painleve E Picard and B Gambier showed that of the class of nonlinear second order ordinary differential equations with polynomial coefficients those that possess a certain desirable technical property shared by the linear equations nowadays commonly referred to as the Painleve property can always be transformed into one of fifty canonical forms Of these fifty equations just six require new transcendental functions for their solution 4 These new transcendental functions solving the remaining six equations are called the Painleve transcendents and interest in them has revived recently due to their appearance in modern geometry integrable systems 5 and statistical mechanics 6 7 8 In 1895 he gave a series of lectures at Stockholm University on differential equations at the end stating the Painleve conjecture about singularities of the n body problem 9 In the same year he published work on the Painleve paradox an apparent contradiction in simple models of friction 10 In the 1920s Painleve briefly turned his attention to the new theory of gravitation general relativity which had recently been introduced by Albert Einstein In 1921 Painleve proposed the Gullstrand Painleve coordinates for the Schwarzschild metric The modification in the coordinate system was the first to reveal clearly that the Schwarzschild radius is a mere coordinate singularity with however profound global significance it represents the event horizon of a black hole This essential point was not generally appreciated by physicists until around 1963 citation needed In his diary Harry Graf Kessler recorded that during a later visit to Berlin Painleve discussed pacifist international politics with Einstein but there is no reference to discussions concerning the significance of the Schwarzschild radius 11 Early political career edit Between 1915 and 1917 Painleve served as French Minister for Public Instruction and Inventions In December 1915 he requested a scientific exchange agreement between France and Britain resulting in Anglo French collaboration that ultimately led to the parallel development by Paul Langevin in France and Robert Boyle in Britain of the first active sonar 12 First period as French Prime Minister edit Painleve took his aviation interests along with those in naval and military matters with him when he became in 1906 Deputy for Paris s 5th arrondissement the so called Latin Quarter By 1910 he had vacated his academic posts and World War I led to his active participation in military committees joining Aristide Briand s cabinet in 1915 as Minister for Public Instruction and Inventions 3 On his appointment as War Minister in March 1917 he was immediately called upon to give his approval albeit with some misgivings to Robert Georges Nivelle s wildly optimistic plans for a breakthrough offensive in Champagne Painleve reacted to the disastrous public failure of the plan by dismissing Nivelle and controversially replacing him with Henri Philippe Petain 13 He was also responsible for isolating the Russian Expeditionary Force in France in the La Courtine camp located in a remote spot on the plateau of Millevaches 14 On 7 September 1917 Prime Minister Alexandre Ribot lost the support of the Socialists and Painleve was called upon to form a new government 3 nbsp Autochrome portrait by Auguste Leon 1918Painleve was a leading voice at the Rapallo conference that led to the establishment of the Supreme Allied Council a consultative body of Allied powers that anticipated the unified Allied command finally established in the following year He appointed Ferdinand Foch as French representative knowing that he was the natural Allied commander On Painleve s return to Paris he was defeated and resigned on 13 November 1917 to be succeeded by Georges Clemenceau Foch was finally named Allied generalissimo in March 1918 eventually becoming commander in chief of all Allied armies on the Western and Italian fronts 3 13 15 Second period as French Prime Minister editPainleve then played little active role in politics until the election of November 1919 when he emerged as a leftist critic of the right wing Bloc National By the time the next election approached in May 1924 his collaboration with Edouard Herriot a fellow member of Briand s 1915 cabinet had led to the formation of the Cartel des Gauches Winning the election Herriot became Prime Minister in June while Painleve became President of the Chamber of Deputies Though Painleve ran for President of France in 1924 he was defeated by Gaston Doumergue Herriot s administration publicly recognised the Soviet Union accepted the Dawes Plan and agreed to evacuate the Ruhr However a financial crisis arose from the ensuing devaluation of the franc and in April 1925 Herriot fell and Painleve became Prime Minister for a second time on 17 April Unfortunately he was unable to offer convincing remedies for the financial problems and was forced to resign on 21 November 3 13 16 nbsp Paul Painleve in the 1920sLater political career edit Following Painleve s resignation Briand formed a new government with Painleve as Minister for War Though Briand was defeated by Raymond Poincare in 1926 Painleve continued in office Poincare stabilised the franc with a return to the gold standard but ultimately acceded power to Briand 3 During his tenure as Minister of War Painleve was instrumental in the creation of the Maginot Line This line of military fortifications along France s Eastern border was largely designed by Painleve yet named for Andre Maginot owing to Maginot s championing of public support and funding citation needed Painleve remained in office as Minister for War until July 1929 3 From 1925 to 1933 Painleve represented France in the International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation of the League of Nations he replaced Henri Bergson and was himself replaced by Edouard Herriot 17 Though he was proposed for President of France in 1932 Painleve withdrew before the election He became Minister of Air later that year making proposals for an international treaty to ban the manufacture of bomber aircraft and to establish an international air force to enforce global peace On the fall of the government in January 1933 his political career ended 3 Painleve died in Paris in October of the same year 13 On 4 November after a eulogy by Prime Minister Albert Sarraut he was interred in the Pantheon 18 Honours editPainleve was elected an International Member of the American Philosophical Society in 1918 19 The aircraft carrier Painleve was named in his honour 20 The asteroid 953 Painleva was named in his honour 21 The Laboratoire Paul Painleve fr a French mathematics research lab is named in his honour Maurice Ravel dedicated the second of his Trois Chansons to him in 1915 Composition of governments editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Painleve s First Government 12 September 16 November 1917 edit Paul Painleve President of the Council and Minister of War Alexandre Ribot Minister of Foreign Affairs Louis Loucheur Minister of Armaments and War Manufacturing Theodore Steeg Minister of the Interior Louis Lucien Klotz Minister of Finance Andre Renard Minister of Labour and Social Security Provisions Raoul Peret Minister of Justice Charles Chaumet Minister of Marine Charles Daniel Vincent Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts Fernand David Minister of Agriculture Maurice Long Minister of General Supply Rene Besnard Minister of Colonies Albert Claveille Minister of Public Works and Transport Etienne Clementel Minister of Commerce Industry Posts and Telegraphs Louis Barthou Minister of State Leon Bourgeois Minister of State Paul Doumer Minister of State Jean Dupuy Minister of StateChanges 27 September 1917 Henry Franklin Bouillon entered the ministry as Minister of State 23 October 1917 Louis Barthou succeeded Ribot as Minister of Foreign AffairsPainleve s Second Ministry 17 April 29 October 1925 edit Paul Painleve President of the Council and Minister of War Aristide Briand Minister of Foreign Affairs Abraham Schrameck Minister of the Interior Joseph Caillaux Minister of Finance Antoine Durafour Minister of Labour Hygiene Welfare Work and Social Security Provisions Theodore Steeg Minister of Justice Emile Borel Minister of Marine Anatole de Monzie Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts Louis Anteriou Minister of Pensions Jean Durand Minister of Agriculture Orly Andre Hesse Minister of Colonies Pierre Laval Minister of Public Works Charles Chaumet Minister of Commerce and IndustryChanges 11 October 1925 Anatole de Monzie succeeded Steeg as Minister of Justice Yvon Delbos succeeded Monzie as Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts Painleve s Third Ministry 29 October 28 November 1925 edit Paul Painleve President of the Council and Minister of Finance Aristide Briand Minister of Foreign Affairs Edouard Daladier Minister of War Abraham Schrameck Minister of the Interior Georges Bonnet Minister of Budget Antoine Durafour Minister of Labour Hygiene Welfare Work and Social Security Provisions Camille Chautemps Minister of Justice Emile Borel Minister of Marine Yvon Delbos Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts Louis Anteriou Minister of Pensions Jean Durand Minister of Agriculture Leon Perrier Minister of Colonies Anatole de Monazie Minister of Public Works Charles Daniel Vincent Minister of Commerce and IndustryWorks editSur les lignes singulieres des fonctions analytiques 1887 On singular lines of analytic functions Memoire sur les equations differentielles du premier ordre 1892 Memory on first order differential equations Lecons sur la theorie analytique des equations differentielles A Hermann Paris 1897 A course on analytic theory of differential equations Lecons sur les fonctions de variables reelles et les developpements en series de polynomes 1905 A course on real variable functions and polynomial development series Cours de mecanique et machines Paris 1907 A course on mechanics and machines Cours de mecanique et machines 2 Paris 1908 A course on mechanics and machines 2 Lecons sur les fonctions definies par les equations differentielles du premier ordre Gauthier Villars Paris 1908 A course on functions defined by first order differential equations L aeroplane Lille 1909 Aeroplane Cours de mecanique et machines Paris 1909 A course on mechanics and machines L aviation Paris Felix Alcan 1910 Aviation Les axiomes de la mecanique examen critique Note sur la propagation de la lumiere 1922 Mechanics axioms a critical study Notes on light spread Lecons sur la theorie analytique des equations differentielles Hermann Paris 1897 A course on analytical theory of differential equations Trois memoires de Painleve sur la relativite 1921 1922 Painleve s three memories on relativity See also editList of people on the cover of Time Magazine 1920sReferences edit Smart Nick 1996 The Maginot Line An Indestructible Inheritance International Journal of Heritage Studies 2 4 222 233 doi 10 1080 13527259608722177 Thomas Martin 2005 Albert Sarraut French Colonial Development and the Communist Threat 1919 1930 Journal of Modern History 77 4 917 955 doi 10 1086 499830 S2CID 146245219 a b c d e f g h i j k O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Paul Painleve MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Painleve P 1897 Lecons sur la theorie analytique des equations differentielles Paris Libraire Scientifique a Hermann Ablowitz M J and Clarkson P A 1991 Solitons nonlinear evolution equations and inverse scattering Cambridge University Press Wu T T B M McCoy C A Tracy E Barouch 1976 Spin spin correlation functions for the two dimensional Ising model Exact theory in the scaling region Physical Review B 13 1 316 374 Bibcode 1976PhRvB 13 316W doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 13 316 Jimbo Michio Tetsuji Miwa Yasuko Mori Mikio Sato April 1980 Density matrix of an impenetrable Bose gas and the fifth Painleve transcendent Physica D 1 1 80 158 Bibcode 1980PhyD 1 80J doi 10 1016 0167 2789 80 90006 8 Tracy C A H Widom 1997 On Exact Solutions to the Cylindrical Poisson Boltzmann Equation with Applications to Polyelectrolytes Physica A 244 1 4 402 413 arXiv cond mat 9701067 Bibcode 1997PhyA 244 402T doi 10 1016 S0378 4371 97 00229 X S2CID 5785882 Diacu Florin N 1993 Painleve s Conjecture The Mathematical Intelligencer 13 2 6 12 doi 10 1007 BF03024186 S2CID 121592005 Painleve Paul 1895 Sur le lois frottement de glissemment C R Acad Sci 121 112 115 Harry Graf Kessler Berlin 20 February 1925 Freitag Diary entry for Berlin 25 February 1925 Projekt Gutenberg Archived from the original on 5 August 2020 Michael A Ainslie Principles of Sonar Performance Modelling Springer 2010 ISBN 3 540 87661 8 page 13 a b c d Paul Painleve in Encyclopaedia Britannica Cockfield Jamie H 1999 With snow on their boots the tragic odyssey of the Russian Expeditionary Force in France during World War I 1st St Martin s Griffin ed New York St Martin s Griffin p 137 ISBN 978 0312220822 Keegan John 2003 The First World War UK Random House p 403 ISBN 0 7126 8040 3 Edouard Herriot in Encyclopaedia Britannica Grandjean Martin 2018 Les reseaux de la cooperation intellectuelle La Societe des Nations comme actrice des echanges scientifiques et culturels dans l entre deux guerres The Networks of Intellectual Cooperation The League of Nations as an Actor of the Scientific and Cultural Exchanges in the Inter War Period phdthesis in French Lausanne Universite de Lausanne Painleve To Be Buried in Pantheon Today The New York Times 4 November 1933 p 13 Retrieved 29 August 2011 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 4 October 2023 Polmar Norman Genda Minoru 2006 Aircraft Carriers A History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on World Events Washington DC Potomac Books Inc p 86 ISBN 978 1 57488 664 1 Schmadel Lutz D International Astronomical Union 2003 Dictionary of minor planet names Berlin New York Springer Verlag p 84 ISBN 978 3 540 00238 3 Further reading editDutton David 1981 Paul Painleve and the end of the sacred union in Wartime France Journal of Strategic Studies 4 1 46 59 doi 10 1080 01402398108437065 Greenhalgh Elizabeth 2011 Paul Painleve and Franco British Relations in 1917 Contemporary British History 25 1 5 27 doi 10 1080 13619462 2011 546094 S2CID 144569843 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul Painleve Paul Painleve at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Biography French Newspaper clippings about Paul Painleve in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPolitical officesPreceded byAlexandre Ribot Prime Minister of France1917 Succeeded byGeorges ClemenceauPreceded byEdouard Herriot Prime Minister of France1925 Succeeded byAristide Briand Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul Painleve amp oldid 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