Background
Jacques Hadamard was born on December 8, 1865 in Versailles, France. He was the son of Amedee Hadamard, a high school Latin teacher, and Claude-Marie Picard, a piano teacher.
mathematician scientist author
Jacques Hadamard was born on December 8, 1865 in Versailles, France. He was the son of Amedee Hadamard, a high school Latin teacher, and Claude-Marie Picard, a piano teacher.
Initially, Jacques was educated at the Lycée Charlemagne and Lycée Louis-le-Grand. He continued his studies and enrolled in the École Normale Supérieure in 1884, graduaring from the educational institution with bachelor’s degree in 1888 and a doctorate in 1892.
Jacques Hadamard started his career as a teacher in 1890 at the Lycée Buffon in Paris, France, a post he held till 1892. The following year, in 1893, Hadamard accepted a teaching position at the Faculté des Sciences at the University of Bordeaux, where he stayed during the next four years.
In 1897 he started to serve as a lecturer at the University of Paris (Sorbonne) and held the position until 1909, when he was appointed a professor at the École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures, a position he held till 1937. In addition to this post, he was promoted to the chair of analysis at the École Polytechnique in 1912 and at the École Centrale Paris in 1920.
During the period from 1920 to 1937 Jacques also worked as a professor at the Collège de France.
The scientist visited the Soviet Union in 1930 and 1934 and China in 1936 at the invitation of Soviet and Chinese mathematicians.
Jacques stayed in France at the beginning of the Second World War. Later, in 1940, he escaped to southern France.
In 1941 the scientist was appointed a visiting professor at Columbia University in New York. Some time later, he moved to London and when the war ended, Hadamard came back to France.
The scientist wrote several textbooks on a variety of mathematical subjects, including one which explained a mathematician’s thought processes.
Hadamard professed to be an atheist in his religion.
Hadamard was active in the struggle for human rights, serving as a member of the central committee of the Ligue des Droits de l’Homme for sixty years. After the Dreyfus affair, which involved him personally because his second cousin Lucie was the wife of Dreyfus, Hadamard became politically active and a staunch supporter of Jewish causes.
Quotations: "To parents who despair because their children are unable to master the first problems in arithmetic I can dedicate my examples. For, in arithmetic, until the seventh grade I was last or nearly last."
Jacques married Louise-Anna Trenel in 1892. The couple had five children.