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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 Roman Empire
- Hypatia | Death, Facts, Biography | Britannica
Hypatia, 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 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
- Hypatia of Alexandria
Hypatia of Alexandria is presented every 8th of March as a symbol: sometimes as a “martyr of science,” sometimes as a pretext for sweeping condemnations of the Church Yet beyond fixed ideas and myths, who was Hypatia—and what is the truth about her horrific death according to the historical sources? The historical Hypatia (late 4th–early 5th century) was a distinguished philosopher in
- Hypatia of Alexandria | Philopedia
Hypatia of Alexandria, late antique Neoplatonist philosopher, mathematician, and astronomer, famed teacher and martyr of learning in Roman Egypt
- Hypatia of Alexandria (4th Century CE) - UNESCO
Hypatia, philosopher, astronomer, and mathematician, teaches celestial mechanics, geometry, and the art of reasoning She is the intellectual heir of Plato and Euclid, and students from across the Eastern Roman Empire flock to hear her lectures
- Hypatia (c. 375–415) - Encyclopedia. com
Alexandrian who became one of the most famous intellectuals of her generation, drawing students from all over the Roman Empire Born around 375 ce; died in 415; daughter of Theon (a mathematician and astronomer associated with the Museum of Alexandria)
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