Background
He was the son of the theologian Theodosius Harnack and the twin brother of theologian Adolf von Harnack (who long outlived him) - all of them from Tartu, which in that time was known as Dorpat, in what is today Estonia.
mathematician university professor
He was the son of the theologian Theodosius Harnack and the twin brother of theologian Adolf von Harnack (who long outlived him) - all of them from Tartu, which in that time was known as Dorpat, in what is today Estonia.
His father was a professor at the University of Tartu, and he studied also himself in the university.
Harnack"s inequality applied to harmonic functions. He also worked on the real algebraic geometry of plane curves, proving Harnack"s curve theorem for real plane algebraic curves. After his studies in Tartu, he moved to Erlangen to become a student of Felix Klein.
He published his Doctor of Philosophy thesis in 1875, and received the right to teach (venia legendi) at the university of Leibzig the same year.
One year later he accepted a position at Technical University Darmstadt. Harnack suffered from health problems from 1882 onwards, forcing him to spend long times in a sanatorium.
He published 29 scientific articles and was a well-known mathematician at the time of his death. The various Harnack inequalities in harmonic analysis and in related discrete and probabilistic contexts are named after him, as are the Harnack"s curve theorem and Harnack"s principle.
Saxonian Academy of Sciences.