- GB 275 006203
- Person
- fl 1981-1997
Showing 5552 results
Authority recordMoorhouse, James (1826-1915) Bishop of Melbourne and Bishop of Manchester
- GB 275 002502
- Person
- 1826-1915
BA 1853
Moorman, Mary Caroline (1905-1994) née Trevelyan, historian and biographer
- GB 275 005772
- Person
- 1905-1994
Wife of John Richard Humpidge Moorman (1905-1989), bishop of Ripon and ecumenist.
Mordell, Albert (fl 1945-1957)
- GB 275 002706
- Person
- fl 1945-1957
Mordell, Louis Joel (1888-1972) mathematician
- GB 275 002051
- Person
- 1888-1972
Mathematician. Mordell was born in Philadelphia, the third child of Lithuanian immigrants. He had an interest in mathematics from an early age and though having no specialised training he was well advanced in the subject by the time he entered high school. In 1906 he paid for a one way ticket to England to sit the Cambridge University scholarship exam. He finished top of the list and was awarded a scholarship at St John's College. In 1909 he was Third Wrangler in the Tripos exam and, though there was no great interest in his chosen subject of number theory, Mordell was subsequently awarded the Smith's Prize.
In 1913 Mordell took up a lectureship at Birkbeck College, London, where he remained, with an interruption for war work at the Ministry of Munitions, until 1920. Moving to the Manchester College of Technology he produced his most important work, his 'finite basis theorem'. This states that the rational points on a non-singular plane cubic can all be obtained from a finite number of them by a definite process. In 1922 Mordell took a readership at the University of Manchester and was appointed to the Fielden chair of pure mathematics a year later. In 1924 he was elected to the Royal Society and took British nationality in 1929.
In 1945 Mordell returned to Cambridge to take up the Sadleirian chair, also being elected to a Fellowship at St John's College. He retired from the Professorship in 1953 but continued working, publishing and lecturing. A keen traveler, he was delighted to accept visiting professorships from all parts of the globe. He died in 1972.
Mordell was awarded the Sylvester medal of the Royal Society in 1949. He was president of the London Mathematical Society (1943-5) and received both its De Morgan medal (1941) and its senior Berwick prize (1946).
Though more than an able mathematician, Mordell was probably better known as a research facilitator. An enlightened head of department and very concerned with the quality of teaching, he created an extremely strong school of mathematics, both at Manchester in the 1930s when almost every young mathematician of note seems to have passed through his department, and at Cambridge. He was also very influential in the assistance he gave to refugee mathematicians from Germany and Italy in the 1930s and 40s.
He married Mabel Elizabeth, the only daughter of Rosa and Joseph Cambridge, in 1916. They had a son and a daughter.
More, Hannah (1745-1833) writer and philanthropist
- GB 275 003890
- Person
- 1745-1833
- GB 275 002031
- Person
- fl 2003-2006
Senior Lecturer in the School of Art History, University of St. Andrews and joint author (with Deborah Howard) of 'Sound and Space in Renaissance Venice. Architecture, Music, Acoustics' (2009). Moretti has held post-doctoral and research positions in the Villa I Tatti, The Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies; the Department of History of Art, University of Cambridge; and Worcester College, University of Oxford.
- GB 275 004196
- Person
- fl 1978