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         Agnesi Maria:     more books (25)
  1. Italian Mathematicians: Galileo Galilei, Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Fibonacci, Niccolò Fontana Tartaglia, Gerolamo Cardano, Joseph Louis Lagrange
  2. Italian Nuns: Italian Roman Catholic Nuns, Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Scholastica, Clare of Assisi, Rita of Cascia, Clare of Montefalco
  3. 1799 deaths: George Washington, Jean-Charles de Borda, Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Pierre Beaumarchais, John Bacon, Tipu Sultan
  4. Maria Gaetana Agnesi (Italian Edition) by Giovanna Tilche, 1984
  5. Mathematikerinnen im 18. Jahrhundert: Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Gabrielle-Emilie DuChatelet, Sophie Germain: Fallstudien zur Wechselwirkung von Wissenschaft ... (Forum Frauengeschichte) (German Edition) by Ulrike Klens, 1994
  6. Analytical institutions: Tr. into English by the late John Colson. Now 1st printed, from the translator's manuscript under the inspection of John Hellins by Maria Gaetana Agnesi, 1801
  7. Analytical institutions,: In four books by Maria Gaetana Agnesi, 1801
  8. Analytical institutions, by Maria Gaetana Agnesi, 1801
  9. The Contest for Knowledge: Debates over Women's Learning in Eighteenth-Century Italy.(Book review): An article from: The Modern Language Review by Verina R. Jones, 2006-07-01
  10. Women in Eighteenth-Century Mathematics: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Ellen Elghobashi, 2000

21. Hamlet-Justified Procrastinati Essays
Maria Gaetana agnesi maria Agnesi was born in Milan, Italy on May 16, 1718.During her lifetime she accomplished quite a bit. She was the first woman in the
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22. Agnesi
Maria Gaetana Agnesi was one smart woman. By the age of nine she wrote, read andspoke Italian, French, Latin, Greek, German, Spanish and Hebrew,
http://physics.uwstout.edu/staff/mccullough/agnesi.htm
Maria Gaetana Agnesi aversiera , which in Italian means to turn. The word is also a slang short form the avversiere, Even in her own lifetime, Agnesi was very highly regarded in the world of mathematics. She was appointed to the chair of higher mathematics at the University of Bologna by Pope Benedick XIV himself. In his speech, the Pope proclaimed that there was no one in any language who could guide more surely, lead more quickly, or conduct further those who wish to advance in the mathematical sciences than she. For more information on this remarkable woman read Women in Science, H.J. Mozans, 1913, D. Appleton and Company, or check out one of the following sites: UK history site The Agnes Scott College collection The Living Witch of Agnesi

23. Marie-Gaetane AGNESI
Maria Gaetana AGNESI Instituzioni Analitiche ad Uso della Gioventù Italiana, Maria Gaetana AGNESI Analytical Institutions, Translated by John Colson,
http://perso.ens-lyon.fr/natacha.portier/fem/biblio/biblio-1-4.html
1.4 Marie-Gaetane AGNESI (1718-1799)
  • Maria Gaetana AGNESI: Instituzioni Analitiche ad Uso della Gioventù Italiana, Vol.1, Milan, 1748.
  • Maria Gaetana AGNESI: Analytical Institutions, Translated by John Colson, London, Taylor and Wilks, 1801.
  • L. ANZOLETTI: Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Cogliati, Milano, 1900.
  • Gino ARRIGHI: Incontri di Maria G. Agnesi con Jano Planco. Quattro lettere inedite della scienziata milanese, Ist. Lombardo Accad. Sci. Lett. Rend. A (1971) pp. 661-686.
  • June BARROW-GRENN: 1999 Anniversaries: Maria Gaetana Agnesi (d.1799), European Mathematical Society Newsletter, March 1999, Issue 31, pp.18-19.
  • M. Jacques BOYER: Sketch of Maria Agnesi, Popular Science Monthly, Vol.53 (1898).
  • G. CARCANO: Memorie di Grandi e Amici, Cogliati, Milano, 1894, Vol.V.
  • Julian L. COOLIDGE: Six Female Mathematicians, Scripta Mathematica, Vol. 17, March/June 1951, pp. 20-31.
  • Michael DEAKIN: Women in mathematics: fact versus fabulation, Austral. Math. Soc. Gaz. 19 (1992) pp. 105-114.
  • Duane DEAL: The witch of Agnesi, Ganita Bharati Indian Society for History of Mathematics, Bulletin 8 (1986) no. 1-4, 46.
  • André DELEDICQ et Dominique IZOARD: Histoires de maths, ACL - Les Editions du Kangourou, 1998 (pp. 32-35).
  • 24. ŒŸõŒ‹‰Ê -skysoft-
    Translate this page , ?, agnesi maria Gaetana , Agnesi, Maria Gaetana.?, University of Chicago Press. , 2005/05. ,
    http://www.skysoft.co.jp/NewSkysoft/SearchRes.asp?UserID=28968350&Author=Agnesi

    25. Storenorskeleksikon.no
    aggregat av lat.… Agnesi, Maria Gaetana agnesi maria Gaetana italiensk matematikerog filosof, fikk først undervisning av sin far. Hennes fø… Agnesis heks
    http://www.storenorskeleksikon.no/Advanced/underemner.aspx?emne=17

    26. Storenorskeleksikon.no
    agnesi maria Gaetana italiensk matematiker og filosof, fikk først undervisningav sin far. Hennes fø… agnostiker person som har agnostiske oppfatninger.…
    http://www.storenorskeleksikon.no/Advanced/underemner.aspx?emne=54

    27. L'Araba Felice, Associazione Culturale Che Svolge Progetti Di Ricerca Culturale
    Translate this page agnesi maria Gaetana. agnesi maria Teresa. Aïssé Charlotte. Akerman Chantal.Alacevich Allegra. Alberghetti Maria. Albiosa Maggi Ginevra. Alcott Louisa May
    http://www.arabafelice.it/bacheca/leggi.php?id=277

    28. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Maria Gaetana Agnesi
    An Italian woman of remarkable intellectual gifts and attainments. Member of the Blue Nuns in Milan. (17181799)
    http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01214b.htm
    Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... A > Maria Gaetana Agnesi A B C D ... Z
    Maria Gaetana Agnesi
    versiera , is also called "the Witch of Agnesi". Maria gained such reputation as a mathematician that she was appointed by Benedict XIV to teach mathematics in the University of Bologna, during her father's illness. This was in 1750, and two years later her father died. Maria then devoted herself to the study of theology and the Fathers of the Church. Her long aspirations to the religious life were destined to be gratified, for after acting for some years as director of the Hospice Trivulzio of the Blue Nuns in Milan, she joined the order and died a member of it, in her eighty-first year. JOHN J. A'BECKET
    Transcribed by Paul T. Crowley
    Dedicated to Mrs. Bobbie Forrester and Mr. Richard Long The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume I
    Nihil Obstat, March 1, 1907.
    Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
    Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York If an ad appears here that contradicts Catholic teachings, please click here to notify the webmaster. Praise Jesus Christ in His Angels and in His Saints
    New Advent is dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of Mary

    29. Maria Teresa D'Agnesi
    Biography and list of her known works.
    http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/8747/Agnesi_bio.html
    According to the entry in the Norton/Grove Dictionary of Women Composers: Italian composer, harpsichordist, singer and librettist. As a girl she performed in her home while her elder sister Maria Gaetna (1718-99; she became a distinquished mathematician) lectured and debated in Latin. Charles de Brosses, who heard them on 16 July 1739 and was highly impressed, reported that Maria Teresa performed harpsichord pieces by Rameau and both sang and played compositions of her own invention. Her first theatrical work, Il restauro d'Arcadia, was successfully presented in Milan's ducal theatre in 1747. At about this time she dedicated collections of her own arias and instrumental pieces to the rulers of Saxony and Austria; according to Simonetti the Empress Maria Theresa sang from a collection of arias that Agnesi had given her. She married Pier Antonio Pinottini on 13 June 1752 but had no children. Her next opera, Ciro in Armenia, produced a the Regio Ducal Teatro in 1753, was to her own libretto. In 1766 her Insubria consolata was performed in Milan to honour the engagement of Beatrice d'Este and the Archduke Ferdinand. Her portrait hangs in the theatre museum of La Scala; other portraits are reproduced in the encyclopedia Storia di Milano (vols xii, xiv). Works:
    Il ristoro d'Arcadia (cantata pastorale, G. Riviera), ilan, Teatro Ducale, 1747?

    30. Maria Gaetana Agnesi
    Among many others, maria Gaetana agnesi was by far the most important andextraordinary figure maria Gaetana agnesi was born in Milan on May 16, 1718,
    http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/agnesi.htm
    Maria Gaetana Agnesi
    Written by Elif Unlu, Class of 1995 (Agnes Scott College)
    Even though her contribution to mathematics are very important, Maria Gaetana Agnesi was not a typical famous mathematician. She led a quite simple life and she gave up mathematics very early. At first glance her life may seem to be boring, however, considering the circumstances in which she was raised, her accomplishments to mathematics are glorious. Enjoy! During the Middle Ages, under the influence of Christendom, many European countries were opposed to any form of higher education for females. Women were mostly deprived from the fundamental elements of education, such as reading and writing, claiming that these were a source of temptation and sin. For the most part, learning was confined to monasteries and nunneries which constituted the only opportunity for education open to girls during the Middle Ages. After the fall of Constantinople (today Istanbul), many scholars migrated to Rome, bringing Europe knowledge and critical thinking, which in turn gave rise to the Renaissance. However, except in Italy, the status of women throughout Europe changed very slowly. In Italy, however, where the Renaissance had its origin, women made their mark on the academic world. Intellectual women were admired by men, they were never ridiculed for being intellectual and educated. This attitude enabled Italian women to participate in arts, medicine, literature, and mathematics. Among many others, Maria Gaetana Agnesi was by far the most important and extraordinary figure in mathematics during the 18th century.

    31. Witch Of Agnesi
    The bellshaped witch of maria agnesi can be constructed in the following way.Start with a circle of diameter a, centered at the point (0,a/2) on the
    http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/witch.htm
    The Witch of Agnesi
    The bell-shaped witch of Maria Agnesi can be constructed in the following way. Start with a circle of diameter a, centered at the point (0,a/2) on the y-axis. Choose a point A on the line y = a and connect it to the origin with a line segment. Call the point where the segment crosses the circle B. Let P be the point where the vertical line through A crosses the horizontal line through B. The witch is the curve traced by P as A moves along the line y = a. This construction of the witch is a reflection of the one mentioned in the biography across the line y = x.
    Web Resources
  • Famous Curves from the MacTutor History of Mathematics web site
  • Witch of Agnesi by Eric W. Weisstein.
  • The Witch of Agnesi by Daphne Golden and Melissa Hanzsek-Brill, from a Department of Mathematics Education class at the University of Georgia. Return to biography of Maria Agnesi. Biographies of Women Mathematicians Web Site
    Agnes Scott College
    , Atlanta, GA
    Larry Riddle
    , Department of Mathematics
  • 32. Agnesi
    Biography of maria agnesi (17181799) Some accounts of maria agnesi describeher father as being a professor of mathematics at Bologna.
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Agnesi.html
    Born: 16 May 1718 in Milan, Habsburg Empire (now Italy)
    Died: 9 Jan 1799 in Milan, Habsburg Empire (now Italy) Click the picture above
    to see four larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
    Version for printing
    Maria Gaetana Agnesi was the daughter of Pietro Agnesi who came from a wealthy family who had made their money from silk. Pietro Agnesi had twenty-one children with his three wives and Maria was the eldest of the children. As Truesdell writes in [16], Pietro Agnesi:- ... belonged to a class intermediate between the patricians and the merely rich. Such a bourgeois could have a household fit for a lord, comport himself like a knight, mingle freely with some nobles, occupy himself with the finer things of life, be a patron of men of talent. Pietro Agnesi did just that... Some accounts of Maria Agnesi describe her father as being a professor of mathematics at Bologna. It is shown clearly in [12] that this is entirely incorrect, but the error is unfortunately carried forward to [1] and will also be seen in a number of other places. Pietro Agnesi could provide high quality tutors for Maria Agnesi and indeed he did provide her with the best available tutors who were all young men of learning from the Church. She showed remarkable talents and mastered many languages such as Latin, Greek and Hebrew at an early age. At the age of 9 she published a Latin discourse in defence of higher education for women. It was not Agnesi's composition, as has been claimed by some, but rather it was an article written in Italian by one of her tutors which she translated and [16]:-

    33. UWRF Music Faculty - Britton
    Pianist and Professor of Music at University of WisconsinRiver Falls. Biographer and compiler of the keyboard works of maria Teresa agnesi.
    http://www.uwrf.edu/music/bioBritton.html

    Music Department
    College of Arts and Sciences
    Dr. Carolyn Britton
    pianist, is well-known throughout the upper Midwest as a performer, clinician and teacher. She is a Professor at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls, where she teaches Applied Piano, Piano Ensemble , and Music Appreciation, and an Adjunct professor at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. She was for several years, chairman and faculty member of the summer piano workshop of Idyllwild School of Music and the Arts in southern California. A native of Fredonia, New York, she is a graduate of the Eastman School of Music, holds a Master of Music degree from Indiana University and a Doctor of Musical Arts from the University of Minnesota. Among her teachers have been, Lawrence Schauffler, Orazio Frugoni, Bela Nagy, and Paul Freed. She has also studied in Holland with Else Krijgsman of the Amsterdam Conservatory. A recipient of a Woodrow Wilson Research Grant, Dr. Britton has been the biographer and compiler of the keyboard works of the eighteenth-century Italian composer, Maria Teresa Agnesi. The research, conducted in Milan, is the only extant biographical information and collected keyboard works of Agnesi. Dr. Britton was invited as guest clinician at Hsin Chu Teachers College in Hsin Chu, Taiwan for teachers and piano students throughout Taiwan. She did a series of lectures and Master Classes.

    34. Agnesi Portraits
    Portraits of maria agnesi. The URL of this page is, © Copyright information.http//wwwhistory.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/PictDisplay/agnesi.html.
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/PictDisplay/Agnesi.html
    Maria Agnesi
    JOC/EFR August 2001 The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/PictDisplay/Agnesi.html

    35. - Classical Music Dictionary - Free MP3
    Karadar Dictionary entry with brief biography including abilities as harpsichordist and librettist, recommended works, and operas.
    http://www.karadar.it/Dictionary/agnesi.html
    Composers Biography Languages Maria Teresa Agnesi Life Best Works Operas Photo Gallery ...
    Home Page
    Maria Teresa Agnesi Life Italian composer, harpsichordist, singer and librettist: as a girl she performed in her home while her elder sister Maria Gaetna (1718-99; she became a distinquished mathematician) lectured and debated in Latin. Charles de Brosses, who heard them on 16 July 1739 and was highly impressed, reported that Maria Teresa performed harpsichord pieces by Rameau and both sang and played compositions of her own invention. Her first theatrical work, Il restauro d'Arcadia, was successfully presented in Milan's ducal theatre in 1747. At about this time she dedicated collections of her own arias and instrumental pieces to the rulers of Saxony and Austria; according to Simonetti the Empress Maria Theresa sang from a collection of arias that Agnesi had given her. MIDI FILE - Sonata for keyboard (4'13'') She married Pier Antonio Pinottini on 13 June 1752 but had no children. Her next opera, Ciro in Armenia, produced a the Regio Ducal Teatro in 1753, was to her own libretto. In 1766 her Insubria consolata was performed in Milan to honour the engagement of Beatrice d'Este and the Archduke Ferdinand.

    36. AGNESI, MARIA GAETANA
    This was the reference frame that maria agnesi used. Reference frames today useX horizontal and Y vertical. The curve in this reference frame can be found
    http://www.astr.ua.edu/4000WS/AGNESI.html
    AGNESI, MARIA GAETANA
    mathematician - (1718-1799) One of her solutions for an algebraic equation is still found in today's textbooks. The solution follows a curve now called the "witch of Agnesi" not because she was thought to be a witch, but because the shape of the curve was called aversiera , which in Italian means to turn. The word is also a slang short form for the avversiere which means wife of the devil. A series of mistranslations over time finally set the name of curve to the "witch of Agnesi". We now present the Living Witch of Agnesi . Watch the curve grow before your very eyes. She was a child prodigy. By the age of nine she wrote, read and spoke Italian, French, Latin, Greek, German, Spanish and Hebrew, and was known as the "oracle of the seven tongues". When Pope Benedick XIV appointed her to the chair of higher mathematics at the University of Bologna he said Permit me, mademoisells, to unite my personal homage to the plaudits of the entire Academy. I have the pleasure of making known to my country an extremely useful work which has long been desired, and which has hitherto existed only in outline. I do not know of any work of this kind which is clearer, more methodic or more comprehensive than your Analytical Institutions. There is none in any language which can guide more surely, lead more quickly, and conduct further those who wish to advance in the mathematical sciences. I admire particularly the art with which you bring under uniform methods the divers conclusions scattered among the works of geometers and reached by methods entirely different."

    37. Agnesi
    This site is a miscellany of agnesi s mathematics and history collected over A Complete maria Gaetana agnesi, providing both mathematics and history.
    http://instructional1.calstatela.edu/sgray/Agnesi/

    Bibliography

    Quotes

    Acknowledgments

    The "Witch."
    The first surviving
    mathematical work
    written by a woman.
    The corner of
    Via Agnesi in Milan.
    Contents (under development) . . .

    Sequence of Events
    Timeline Grandi's and Fermat's Earlier Work The Instituzioni analitiche ... History of the Name "Witch"
    Interesting Mathematics
    Derivation of the Curve: Equations Graphing Calculator Program Interactive Math Concepts in the "Witch"
    Vignettes from Her Life
    Early Family Life Did She Become a Nun? Tributes and Honors Streets Named for Agnesi ... Her Warning to Future Students
    T his site is a collection of Agnesi miscellany built upon many exciting hours spent in some of the greatest libraries in the English speaking world. We highly recommend that you pause to look at the Bibliography and Acknowledgments web sites to appreciate our far flung efforts to provide students with a tantalizing smattering of the strength of resources in mathematics. The opportunity to see as well as to know is the gift of our generation. Easy foreign travel is also another gift. May your local classroom education provide you with the background to fully appreciate the original sources you see in the future, be it those of mathematics, architecture, art, or any of the other rich treasures of civilization. In a fleeting moment we would like to have the vanity to call this web site A Complete Maria Gaetana Agnesi

    38. Maria
    Kennedy, H., maria Gaetana agnesi (17181799) , in Women of Mathematics ABiobibliographic Sourcebook , eds. LS Grinstein PJ Campbell,
    http://www.roma.unisa.edu.au/07305/maria.htm
    Maria Gaetana Agnesi
    Background
    Agnesi was born in Italy in 1718 to a wealthy and literate family. She was the daughter of a mathematician. During this time, Italy was opposed to education for women, as a result even many upper class women could not read. But Agnesi was an exception. She was to grow up to be called one of the most extraordinary women scholars of all times. She is considered to be the first woman in the Western world who can accurately be called a mathematician (Gillispie 1970). Agnesi never married. She spent most of her time studying mathematics. However after her mothers death most of her time was spent caring for her younger brothers and sisters, and performing household duties (Perl 1978).
    Contributions
    Osen (1990) states that by the age of twenty and after 10 years of thought, Agnesi had produced her major work called Analytical Institutions, a treatise in two huge volumes dealing with differential and integral calculus, with an emphasis on concepts that were new in her time. After her work was published, in 1748, it created a great deal of excitement in the academic world. It was considered to be one of the most important mathematical publications produced by a woman up until that time. It gave her instant recognition in the academic circles of Europe. In the first section Analytical Institutions deals with the analysis of finite quantities. It also deals with elementary problems of maxima and minima, tangents, and points of inflection. The next section discusses the analysis of infinitely small quantities. The third section deals with integral calculus, with specific rules for integration and finally the last section deals with the inverse method of tangents and differential equations (Gillispie 1970).

    39. Malaspina Great Books - Maria Gaetana Agnesi (1718)
    Books, Music, Art, Books from Alibris maria Gaetana agnesi Books from Amazonmaria agnesi Audiobooks at iTunes Thousands of Classics
    http://www.malaspina.com/site/person_55.asp
    Biography and Research Links:
    Please wait for Page to Load or Maria Gaetana Agnesi (1718-1799)

    40. Agnesi, Maria Gaetana --  Encyclopædia Britannica
    agnesi, maria Gaetana Italian mathematician and philosopher, considered to bethe first woman in the Western world to have achieved a reputation in
    http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9004047
    Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in Content Related to this Topic This Article's Table of Contents Maria Gaetana Agnesi Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled. The Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (Hardcover) Price: USD $15.95 The Scrabble player's bible on sale! Save 30%. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Price: USD $19.95 Save big on America's best-selling dictionary. Discounted 38%! More Britannica products Agnesi, Maria Gaetana
     Encyclopædia Britannica Article Page 1 of 1
    Maria Gaetana Agnesi
    born May 16, 1718, Milan, Habsburg crown land [now in Italy]
    died January 9, 1799, Milan
    Italian mathematician and philosopher, considered to be the first woman in the Western world to have achieved a reputation in mathematics.
    Agnesi, Maria Gaetana... (75 of 286 words) var mm = [["Jan.","January"],["Feb.","February"],["Mar.","March"],["Apr.","April"],["May","May"],["June","June"],["July","July"],["Aug.","August"],["Sept.","September"],["Oct.","October"],["Nov.","November"],["Dec.","December"]];

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