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Adolf Hurwitz
He was a doctoral student of Felix Klein in Leipzig, finishing a dissertation on elliptic modular functions in 1881. In 1884 he was offered a professorial position at Königsberg; there he encountered the young David Hilbert, on whom he had a major influence. He took a chair at the Eidgenössische Polytechnikum Zürich in 1892, and remained there for the rest of his life. He was one of the early masters of the Riemann surface theory, and used it to prove many of the foundational results on algebraic curves; for instance Hurwitz's automorphisms theorem. This work anticipates a number of later theories, such as the general theory of algebraic correspondences, Hecke operators, and Lefschetz fixed-point theorem. He also had deep interests in number theory. He studied the maximal order theory (as it now would be) for the quaternions, defining the Hurwitz quaternions that are now named for him. See alsoExternal links
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