Inspirational Stories of Women
Who Made a Difference!
June 2008
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Women!
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chance to win a copy of this month's
Featured Book, Ladies of Liberty and we'd love to have
you enter. To enter the contest send your name and address
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Patti
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MEMORABLE QUOTE
"You block your
dream when you allow your fear to grow bigger than your faith."
~Mary Manin Morrissey
Women of Science
Sofia Kovalevskaya
Mathematician
By Tzetzka Ilieva
How many young women do you know who
like mathematics and cannot resist to the challenge of studying
it? Not many, right? For centuries this fascinating science was
considered an area reserved only for men and if the number of
female mathematicians grows slowly but constantly now, it is
because of women like Sofia Vasilievna Kovalevskaya (1851-1891).
She was one of the first women with PhD on mathematics and one
of the first women-professors in Europe.
Sofia was born January 15, 1850 in
Moscow, Russia. In both Europe and America at this time, a girl
could not get easily an education higher than the elementary. It
was a common practice to prohibit the women attending lectures
in the universities.
Sofia was the middle child of Elizabeth
Fedrovna and general Vasily Vasilevich Korvin-Krukovsky, both
coming from noble families. Her mother was “quite young and very
beautiful,” according to Sofia’s memoirs. Elizabeth was also
well read and spoke four European languages. The General served
in the artillery and the family moved often until he retired.
When Sofia was about eight years old, they settled in the family
estate in Palibino, Provence of Vitebsk, in the northwest part
of Russia. The big house was in the middle of a “wild and thinly
populated area.” A vast forest bordered the estate from one side
and from the other lay miles of meadows, hills and beautiful
lakes. There couldn’t be a better place to provoke a child’s
imagination.
The nobles in Russia had nurses and
governesses to take care of the children. Usually the boys were
seriously prepared from private tutors to continue their
education in a military college or university. The goal for the
girls was to make them literate and charming conversationalists
with some ability in the arts so they could have more chances of
finding a good husband.
Despite of the “wild” location of their
estate, Sofia received better education than most of the girls
at the time. Her father, as intelligent and well-educated man
himself, hired for his children one of the best tutors. Sofia’s
passion for mathematics, however, was born in the conversations
with her uncle Pyotr Vasilievich Korvin-Krukovsky who loved
reading and often shared his knowledge and ideas with his young
niece. He had “a most profound respect” for mathematics. His
talks about different mathematical concepts created in the
girl’s mind a strong attraction to this “new world of wonders,
inaccessible to ordinary mortals.”
Of course, Sofia could not understand
those concepts back then, but the more she was learning, the
more her talent was developing. In her attempt to dissolve the
trigonometric formulas in one physics book (written by a
neighbor, professor of physics), she followed the same way that
was used historically. Her technique impressed the author so
much that he convinced Sofia’s father to send her for some
private lessons in St. Petersburg. Being a woman, she was not
allowed to attend the university there.
In 1868 Sofia married the young
naturalist Vladimir Kovalevsky. They lived for some time in St.
Petersburg where she unofficially attended lectures on
physiology. Sofia had the approval of the professor, but had to
enter through the back stairway so the authorities could not see
her. The only other woman in the hall for two hundred people was
an elderly midwife.
“The students behaved excellently and
didn’t stare,” Sofia wrote in a letter after the first lecture.
In 1869 the Kovalevskys moved to
Heidelberg, Germany. In the university there Sofia went from one
professor to other, trying to get permission for attending some
lectures on mathematics and physics. It was “such an unusual
request from a woman” that a special commission had to be set
but Sofia eventually received her permit. Soon the professors
realized that their new student was “something extraordinary,”
not because of her sex but because of her brilliant mind.
Everybody in the small university town was talking about the
“surprising Russian girl.” Her popularity did not affect her
modesty or the strong desire to study.
In 1870 Sofia went to Berlin to work
with one of the leading mathematicians in Europe, Professor Karl
Weierstass. Under his guidance she wrote three exceptional
papers. One of them, The Theory of Partial Differential
Equations, was considered as her official doctorate
dissertation. The proof in this work is known now as The Theorem
of Cauchy-Kovalevsky.
During the last years of her life, Sofia
read lectures in the University of Stockholm. She never got the
chance to teach in a Russian university, but was acknowledged by
the Russian scientific society as the first woman Correspondent
Member of the St. Petersburg Academy of Science.
Sofia Kovalevskaya died from pneumonia
in 1891, at the age of forty-one.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Sofia Kovalevskaia, A Russian Childhood, trans. and
ed. Beatrice Stillman (New York: Springer-Verlag, 1978)
2. Don Kennedy, Little Sparrow (Athens, Ohio: Ohio Univ.
Press,1983)
3. Ольга Ушакова, Поговорим о Великие Женщинах Века...Сибирское
Отделение Российской Академии Наук. n. d. < http://www-sbras.nsc.ru/HBC/2000/n01/f10.html>
4. Becky Wilson, Sofia Kovalevskaya. Agnes Scott College.
Nov. 16, 2005 <http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/kova.htm>
5. Pilar Ballarin, Margarita M. Birriel, Candida Martinez,
Teresa Ortiz. Histoire des femmes et des mouvements feminists en
Europe. Xantippa. n. d. http://www.helsinki.fi/science/xantippa/wef/wef20.html
Tzetzka
lives with her family in Georgia. She loves history and writes
biographies and folktale retellings.
FEATURED BOOK
Ladies
of Liberty
By Cokie Roberts
William Morrow
Retail price $26.95
Amazon price: $17.99
Book Description:
In Founding Mothers, Cokie Roberts paid homage to the
heroic women whose patriotism and sacrifice helped create a new
nation. Now the number one New York Times bestselling author
and renowned political commentator—praised in USA Today as a
"custodian of time-honored values"—continues the story of early
America's influential women with Ladies of Liberty. In her
"delightfully intimate and confiding" style (Publishers Weekly),
Roberts presents a colorful blend of biographical portraits and
behind-the-scenes vignettes chronicling women's public roles and
private responsibilities.
Recounted with the insight and humor of an expert storyteller and
drawing on personal correspondence, private journals, and other
primary sources—many of them previously unpublished—Roberts brings
to life the extraordinary accomplishments of women who laid the
groundwork for a better society. Almost every quotation here is
written by a woman, to a woman, or about a woman. From first ladies
to freethinkers, educators to explorers, this exceptional group
includes Abigail Adams, Margaret Bayard Smith, Martha Jefferson,
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About the Author
Cokie Roberts is a political commentator for ABC News and a
senior news analyst for National Public Radio. From 1996 to 2002,
she and Sam Donaldson co-anchored the weekly ABC interview program,
This Week.
In addition to broadcasting, Roberts, along with her husband,
Steven V. Roberts, writes a weekly column syndicated in newspapers
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Day Forward, an account of their now more than forty-year
marriage and other marriages in American history. The book
immediately went onto the New York Times bestseller list,
following a six-month run on the list by Roberts's first book on
women in American history, We Are Our Mothers' Daughters.
Roberts is also the author of the bestselling Founding Mothers,
the companion volume to Ladies of Liberty. A mother of two
and grandmother of six, she lives with her husband in Bethesda,
Maryland.
History's Women Review
|
|
Women's history titles always excite me. Sometimes it is
hard to research the contributions of women in history. Cokie
Roberts does an excellent job in telling the stories of women who
helped to shape our nation. In this book you will find chapters on
Abigail Adams, Margaret Bayard Smith, Martha Jefferson, Dolley
Madison, Elizabeth Monroe, Louisa Catherine Adams, Eliza Hamilton,
Thodosia Burr, Sacajawea, and many more.
The book is informative and very well written. Roberts gets
much of her information from letters written by the women themselves
that have survived to this day.
Even if you don't normally like the topic of history, I feel you
will enjoy Ladies of Liberty. The author writes in a very relaxed
style and is easy to read. I think both men and women will
enjoy this book.
You can order this book for $17.99 at
Amazon.com.
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Women Newsletter is for informational purposes only.
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