Spelling suggestions: "subject:"mathias""
1 |
Anselme Mathieu (1828-1895) ein Beitrag zur Charakteristik des âltesten Felibrige.Hirsch, Martin, January 1939 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Halle-Wittenberg. / Contains the first two chapters. The complete work appears as no. 28 of Romanistische Arbeiten, Halle (Saale) M. Niemeyer, 1939 (viii, 189 p.).
|
2 |
Mathieu functionsGoldstein, Sydney January 1928 (has links)
No description available.
|
3 |
Asymptotic forms of the solutions of the differential equation for the associated Mathieu functionsErickson, Wilhelm Skjelstad, January 1943 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1943. / Typescript with manuscript equations. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaf [40]).
|
4 |
Le duc de Lorraine Mathieu 1er (1139-1176) ...Duvernoy, Emile, January 1904 (has links)
Thèse--Université de Paris. / "Bibliographie": p. [ix]-xiv.
|
5 |
Un fidèle de l'Empereur en son époque Jean Mathieu Alexandre Sari, 1792-1862 /Beaucour, Fernand Emile. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis--Université de Lille. / Limited edition of 100 copies. No. 37. Includes bibliographical references (t. 1, p. [ixx-lxxxvi]).
|
6 |
Dichtungen von Matthäus dem Juden und Matthäus von GentWolff, Hans, January 1914 (has links)
Thesis--Greifswald. / Cover title. Vita. Bibliography: p. [109] Also available in print.
|
7 |
Dichtungen von Matthäus dem Juden und Matthäus von Gent /Wolff, Hans, January 1914 (has links)
Thesis--Greifswald. / Cover title. Vita. Bibliography: p. [109] Also available as E-Book.
|
8 |
Involutions of the Mathieu groupsFraser, Richard Evan James January 1966 (has links)
The five Mathieu permutation groups M₁₁, M₁₂M₂₂,M₂₃ and M₂₄ are constructed and the involutions (elements of order two) of these groups are classified according to the number of letters they fix. It is shown that in M₁₂ ah involution fixes no letters or four letters, while in M₂₄ an involution fixes zero or eight letters. It is also shown that in each of the Mathieu groups, all the irregular involutions are conjugate and that in M₁₂ all the regular involutions are conjugate. The orders of the centralizers of the involutions are calculated and it is shown that no regular involution lies in the centre of a 2-Sylow subgroup.
Most of the results are obtained by calculating directly the form a permutation must take in order to have a certain property and then finding one or all the permutations of this form. / Science, Faculty of / Mathematics, Department of / Graduate
|
9 |
Quantum Fluctuations of a Cavity QED System with Periodic PotentialJones, Dyan Lynne 20 July 2005 (has links)
No description available.
|
10 |
Mathieu Dumas : a biographyDuncan, Kenneth A. January 1974 (has links)
In a career spanning nearly seven decades, Mathieu Dumas served France as either a soldier or a legislator under each successive government from Louis XV to Louis-Philippe. Born in 1753, he entered the infantry in 1773 as a sous-lieutenant. Although lacking a personal fortune and the backing of family influence, Dumas' energy and ability combined with the support of two powerful patrons, Castries and Puységur, gained him relatively rapid promotion. By 1789 he had served in America as an aide-de-camp to Rochambeau and had been appointed to replace Guibert as rapporteur to the Council of War. Drawn into the politics of the Revolution through his association with the, liberal nobility, principally Lafayette and the Lameths, Dumas became the parliamentary leader of the Feuillant party in the Legislative Assembly, a major critic of the war and one of Lafayette's most courageous defenders. However, he also worked to improve the French army and aided in the deference of Paris during the Prussian invasion. With the end of the Assembly, Dumas sought to serve 'the Republic, but public suspicion forced him to flee to Switzerland. There Dumas, Brémond and Theodore Lameth met with the British agent Wickham to discuss their plan for the restoration of the Constitution of 1791, but not of the émigrés. The Thermidorian Reaction led to Dumas' return to France and to his re-entry into politics as a deputy in the Council of Elders under the Directory. The leader of a revived Feuillant party, Dumas pursued a moderate policy, preferring the gradual repeal of revolutionary legislation and cooperation with the Directory to the restoration of an unreconciled Louis XVIII. Proscribed on 18 Fructidor V, he went to Hamburg and remained there, working on what was to become his magnum opus, the Précis des Événemens Militaires, until Bonaparte's seizure of power. Despite his mistrust of Dumas' political opinions, Napoleon could not overlook his administrative ability and he employed him in high positions throughout the Consulate and the Empire. Dumas' support of Napoleon during the Hundred Days resulted in his forced retirement under the Restoration which lasted, except- for a brief interval under St. Cyr's ministry until 1828. Elected to the Chamber of Deputies in that year, Dumas gave his support to the Liberals and to Louis-Philippe. He died in 1837, widely known and respected as a soldier and as a military historian. Although a military as well as a civil figure, Dumas exemplifies the fate of moderates caught in the Revolution and its aftermath.
|
Page generated in 0.051 seconds