R. W. H. T. Hudson
Ronald William Henry Turnbull Hudson (16 July 1876 – 20 September 1904) was a British mathematician.[1] Hudson was born into a family of mathematical talents.[2] He was the oldest of four children of William Henry Hoar Hudson, Professor of Mathematics at King's College London,[1] and his mother read mathematics at Newnham College, Cambridge.[3] Both of his sisters became mathematicians.[4] Hudson read mathematics in St John's College, Cambridge, beginning in 1895, and became senior wrangler in 1898. In the same year he was elected as a Fellow of St John's. He moved to University College, Liverpool as a lecturer in 1902, and defended a doctorate (D.Sc.) at the University of London in 1903. In 1904, Hudson died in a mountaineering accident in Snowdonia at the age of 28.[1] In 1905, his posthumously-published book Kummer's Quartic Surface has gone on to become one of the most foundational texts in geometry.[5] Publications
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