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Joseph-Louis Lagrange

Joseph-Louis Lagrange

1736 CE1813 CE · Turin

Joseph-Louis Lagrange (born Giuseppe Luigi Lagrangia or Giuseppe Ludovico De la Grange Tournier; 25 January 1736 – 10 April 1813), also reported as Giuseppe Luigi Lagrange or Lagrangia, was an Italian and naturalized French mathematician, physicist and astronomer. He made significant contributions to the fields of analysis, number theory, and both classical and celestial mechanics. In 1766, on the recommendation of Leonhard Euler and d'Alembert, Lagrange succeeded Euler as the director of mathematics at the Prussian Academy of Sciences in Berlin, Prussia, where he stayed for over twenty years, producing many volumes of work and winning several prizes of the French Academy of Sciences. Lagrange's treatise on analytical mechanics (Mécanique analytique, 4. ed., 2 vols. Paris: Gauthier-Villars et fils, 1788–89), which was written in Berlin and first published in 1788, offered the most comprehensive treatment of classical mechanics since Isaac Newton and formed a basis for the development of mathematical physics in the nineteenth century. In 1787, at age 51, he moved from Berlin to Paris and became a member of the French Academy of Sciences. He remained in France until the end of his life. He was instrumental in the decimalisation process in Revolutionary France, became the first professor of analysis at the École Polytechnique upon its opening in 1794, was a founding member of the Bureau des Longitudes, and became Senator in 1799.

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TurinItaly

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About Turin

Turin, the capital of Piedmont in northwestern Italy, an ancient see. Maximus of Turin was its bishop around 400 and left a large corpus of sermons.

In Turin at the same time

Amedeo Avogadro, Augustin-Louis Cauchy

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Influenced byLeonhard EulerJoseph-Louis LagrangeShapedJoseph FourierSiméon Denis Poisson
Related figuresJean le Rond d'AlembertPierre-Simon LaplaceCarl Friedrich GaussSuggested by shared subject matter, not a documented teaching relationship.