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Theodore William Chaundy

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Citizenship
  
British

Name
  
Theodore Chaundy

Fields
  
Differential calculus

Died
  
April 14, 1966


Institutions
  
Oxford University

Institution
  
University of Oxford

Spouse
  
Hilda Weston Dott

Born
  
19 January 1889 (
1889-01-19
)

Known for
  
Burchnall–Chaundy theory

Books
  
The Printing of Mathematics: Aids for Authors and Editors and Rules for Compositors and Readers at the University Press, Oxford

Alma mater
  
Balliol College, University of Oxford

Doctoral students
  
Kathleen Ollerenshaw

Theodore William Chaundy (19 January 1889—14 April 1966) was an English mathematician who introduced Burchnall–Chaundy theory.

Chaundy was born to widowed businessman John Chaundy and his second wife Sarah Pates in their shop-cum-home at 49 Broad Street in Oxford. John had eight children, one of whom died as a toddler, with his late first wife and died barely a year after Chaundy was born. The Chaundy home along Broad Street has since been demolished.

Chaundy attended Oxford High School for Boys and read mathematics at Balliol College, Oxford on a scholarship. In 1912 he became a lecturer at Oxford and later named a Fellow of Christ Church, Oxford. He married Hilda Weston Dott (1890-1986) in 1920. They had five children and thirteen grandchildren.

Publications

  • Chaundy, Theodore (1935). The differential calculus. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 
  • Chaundy, T. W.; Barrett, P. R.; Batey, Charles (1954). The printing of mathematics. Aids for authors and editors and rules for compositors and readers at the University Press, Oxford. Oxford University Press. MR 0062667. 
  • Chaundy, T. W. (1969). McLeod, J. Bryce, ed. Elementary differential equations. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-853142-5. MR 0257444. 
  • References

    Theodore William Chaundy Wikipedia


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