Johann Jakob Rebstein
Johann Jakob Rebstein (1840–1907) was a Swiss mathematician and surveyor. Early lifeRebstein was born on 4 May 1840 in Töss, Switzerland, to his father, a baker and his mother, a doctor.[1]: 131 Education and careerRebstein attended post-secondary school in Winterthur, and after graduating in 1860, went on to study for a year at Collège de France.[1]: 131 He was professor of mathematics and physics in Zürich from 1877 to 1898.[2] He was awarded his doctorate in 1895 from the Humboldt University of Berlin for his work Bestimmung aller reellen Minimalflächen, die eine Schaar ebener Curven enthalten, denen auf der Gauss'schen Kugel die Meridiane entsprechen.[a][2][3] He is best known for his work in surveying, and for introducing the traverse method in Switzerland. Throughout his career, Rebstein was appointed as surveying expert for a number of cantons, including Thurgau (1863–1881), St. Gallen (1881–1894), Zürich (1886–1892), and Luzern (1894–1907).[2]: 131 In 1868 he was elected to the Swiss Concordat of Geometers, and served as its president from 1887 until his death in 1907.[1]: 132 In 1905 he was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Zürich, for "outstanding contributions to actuarial sciences".[2] Rebstein was a member of the organizing committee for the first meeting of the International Congress of Mathematicians.[1]: 79 DeathRebstein suffered from kidney disease for the last several years of his life, and died in 1907 in Zürich.[1]: 133 PublicationsRebstein's publications included:[1]: 132
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