Saint Petersburg Mathematical Society

The Saint Petersburg Mathematical Society (Russian: Санкт-Петербургское математическое общество) is a mathematical society run by Saint Petersburg mathematicians.

Saint Petersburg Mathematical Society
Санкт-Петербургское математическое общество
Logo of the Saint Petersburg Mathematical society
Formation1890 (1890)
Location
  • Fontanka 27, St. Petersburg, 191023, Russia
FieldsMathematics
Official language
ru
President
Yuri Matiyasevich
AffiliationsEuropean Mathematical Society
Websitewww.mathsoc.spb.ru
Formerly called
  • Leningrad Mathematical Society (Russian: Ленинградское математическое общество) (1959–1990)
  • Leningrad Physical and Mathematical Society (Russian: Ленинградское физико-математическое общество) (1924–1930)
  • Petrograd Physical and Mathematical Society (Russian: Петроградское физико-математическое общество) (1921–1924)
  • Saint Petersburg Mathematical Society (Russian: Санкт-Петербургское математическое общество) (1890–1905)

Historical notes

The St. Petersburg Mathematical Society was founded in 1890 and was the third founded mathematical society in Russia after the Moscow (1867) and the Khar'kov (1879) ones.[1][2] Its founder and first president was Vasily Imshenetskii,[1] who also had founded earlier the Khar'kov Mathematical Society.[3]

The Society was dissolved and subsequently revived twice, each time changing its name: sometime in between 1905 and 1917, the society ceased to function and by 1917 it had completely dissolved, perhaps due to the social agitations that destroyed many existing Russian scientific institutions.[2] It was re-established by the initiative of Alexander Vasilyev in 1921 as the Petrograd Physical and Mathematical Society (subsequently called the Leningrad Physical and Mathematical Society). In 1930, the self-dissolution of the society was due to political reasons.[4] Before the beginning of World War II in 1941, Leonid Kantorovich proposed to revive the society, and a similar failed attempt was made by Vladimir Smirnov in 1953: only in 1959 Yuri Linnik did succeed in reestablishing the society (then called the Leningrad Mathematical Society).[5] It regained the original name the St. Petersburg Mathematical Society in 1991.

Timeline of former presidents

Years President Years President Years President
1890–1892 Vasily Imshenetskii (rus) 1892–1905 Julian Sochocki 1921–1923 Alexander Vasilyev (rus)
1923–1930 Nikolai Günther 1959–1965 Yuri Linnik 1965–1985 Sergei Lozinskii (rus)
1985–1989 Dmitry Faddeev 1990–1998 Olga Ladyzhenskaya 1998–2008 Anatoly Vershik
2008– Yuri Matiyasevich

Honorary members

Activities

"Young mathematician" prize

The "Young Mathematician" prize[6] has been awarded since 1962.

The list of the laureates:

  • V. G. Maz'ya, 1962
  • B. B. Venkov, 1963
  • V. S. Buslaev, 1964
  • A. V. Yakovlev, 1965
  • V. I. Derguzov, 1965
  • A. S. Blagoveshchenskii, 1966
  • V. P. Orevkov, 1967
  • V. V. Zhuk, 1968
  • Yu. V. Matiyasevich, 1970
  • S. A. Vinogradov, 1971
  • Ya. M. Eliashberg, 1973
  • Yu. A. Davydov, 1974
  • N. A. Shirokov, 1975
  • O. Ya. Viro, 1975
  • B. S. Tsirel'son, 1976
  • E. M. Dyn'kin, 1976
  • A. A. Suslin, 1977
  • M. D. Sterlin, 1977
  • S. V. Khrushchev, 1978
  • L. N. Gordeev, 1978
  • O. I. Reinov, 1980
  • N. L. Gordeev, 1980
  • N. E. Barabanov, 1980
  • E. D. Gluskin, 1981
  • A. R. Its, 1981
  • A. S. Merkur'ev, 1982
  • V. V. Peller, 1982
  • E. K. Sklyanin, 1983
  • D. Yu. Grigor'ev & A. L. Chistov, 1984
  • V. L. Kobel'skii, 1984
  • M. L. Lifshits, 1985
  • M. Yu. Lyubich, 1987
  • Yu. G. Safarov, 1987
  • V. A. Kaimanovich, 1988
  • N. Yu. Reshetikhin, 1988
  • A. A. Borichev, 1989
  • O. T. Izhboldin, 1989
  • A. I. Barvinok,1990
  • G. Ya. Perelman, 1991
  • D. Yu. Burago, 1992
  • I. B. Fesenko, 1992
  • F. L. Nazarov, 1993
  • S. M. Shimorin, 1994
  • S. V. Ivanov, 1995
  • T. N. Shilkin, 1997
  • S. K. Smirnov, 1997
  • O. L. Vinogradov, 1997
  • N. V. Tsilevich, 1998
  • A. B. Pushnitskii, 1998
  • G. B. Mikhalkin, 1999
  • O. V. Demchenko, 2000
  • S. G. Kryzhevich, 2001
  • A. V. Malyutin, 2001
  • A. G. Ershler, 2002
  • A. N. Zinoviev, 2003
  • A. D. Baranov, 2004
  • D. S. Chelkak, 2004
  • O. A. Tarakanov, 2005
  • N. V. Durov, 2006
  • K. V. Pervyshev, 2007
  • V. A. Petrov, 2007
  • A. Yu. Luzgarev, 2008
  • V. V. Vysotskii, 2008
  • A. K. Stavrova, 2009
  • S. B. Tikhomirov, 2009
  • P. N. Mnev, 2010
  • Yu. S. Belov, 2011
  • F. V. Petrov, 2011
  • A. S. Ananyevsky, 2012
  • R. S. Pusev, 2012
  • K. A. Izyurov, 2013
  • S. O. Ivanov, 2014
  • P. B. Zatitskiy & D. M. Stolyarov, 2015
  • A. A. Logunov, 2017
  • M. V. Dolgopolik, 2018
  • Yu. P. Petrova, 2019
  • M. V. Platonova, 2019
gollark: You can just work on it during lessons.
gollark: Oh, I forgot you're not in school, you'll be fine then.
gollark: I guess if you trim form time, which you *may* be able to do, then it could work.
gollark: I do not consider 30 minutes or so "ages".
gollark: Okay, ArachnoKarl.

See also

  • List of Mathematical Societies

Notes

  1. (Saint Petersburg Mathematical Society 2012).
  2. (Vershik 1993, p. 21).
  3. According to Ostrovskii (1999, p. 26)
  4. See (Lorentz 2002, §4) for an account of the events leading to its closure.
  5. (Lorentz 2002, p. 191).
  6. The laureates of the annual Young Mathematician prize of the St. Petersburg Mathematical Society

References

  • Протоколы Санкт-Петербургского математического общества (1890 - 1899) [Protocols of the St. Petersburg Mathematical Society (1890 - 1899)] (PDF) (in Russian), St. Petersburg: Типография В. Киршбаума, 1899, p. 131.
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