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- Hypatia - Wikipedia
Hypatia[a] (born c 350–370 – March 415 AD) [1][4] was a Neoplatonist philosopher, astronomer, and mathematician who lived in Alexandria, at that time in the province of Egypt and a major city of the Eastern Roman Empire
- Hypatia | Death, Facts, Biography | Britannica
Hypatia (born c 355 ce —died March 415, Alexandria) was a mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher who lived in a very turbulent era in Alexandria ’s history She is the earliest female mathematician of whose life and work reasonably detailed knowledge exists
- Hypatia: The Female Greek Philosopher Killed for Her Beliefs
Hypatia, one of the greatest philosophers of Alexandria, was admired for her groundbreaking ideas but was brutally murdered for them by Christian fanatics in the fourth century AD
- Hypatia - Biography, Facts and Pictures - Famous Scientists
Hypatia was one of the most eminent mathematicians and astronomers of late antiquity Scholars traveled from around the classical world to learn mathematics and astronomy at her school
- Hypatia of Alexandria - World History Encyclopedia
Hypatia of Alexandria was a Neo-Platonist philosopher who was murdered by a Christian mob in 415 CE Her death is often cited as the end of the Classical Age and the beginning of the Christian Period
- The Story Of Hypatia, The Greek Philosopher Killed For Her Beliefs
People primarily remember Hypatia of Alexandria, martyr of female intellectuals and tragic heroine, for two things: her philosophical, mathematical, and astronomical teachings and the fact that she was brutally murdered for them
- Hypatia the Mathematician
Hypatia is the first woman mathematician about whom we have either biographical knowledge or knowledge of her mathematics Hypatia developed commentaries on older works, probably including those by Ptolemy, Diophantus, and Apollonius, in order to make them easier to understand
- Hypatia of Alexandria - New World Encyclopedia
Hypatia of Alexandria (in Greek: Υπατία) (c 370 C E – 415 C E ) was a popular Hellenized Egyptian female philosopher, mathematician, astronomer astrologer, and teacher who lived in Alexandria, in Hellenistic Egypt, just before the advent of the Dark Ages
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