Marie Fabianová
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Marie Fabianová (also written as Marie Fabiánová; 11 February 1872 – 7 April 1943) was a Czech mathematician, teacher and school principal, suffragette and feminist. She was one of the first Czech women to obtain a university education, the second female graduate of Charles-Ferdinand University, and the first female to graduate with a PhD in math from the University.


Biography

Fabianová was born 11 February 1872 in
Železný Brod Železný Brod (; ) is a town in Jablonec nad Nisou District in the Liberec Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 6,000 inhabitants. The Trávníky district of the town has well preserved folk architecture and is protected as a Cultural monume ...
into the family of Václav Fabián, the chief engineer of the Austrian Northwestern Railway, and his wife Juliana, née Haklová. She had two siblings, Juliana and Václav. After graduating from a local school, she began studying in Prague at the first, newly opened (1890), private girls' grammar school in Central Europe, called Minerva. After graduating from grammar school in 1895, she began to study mathematics at the Faculty of Philosophy of Charles-Ferdinand University in
Prague Prague ( ; ) is the capital and List of cities and towns in the Czech Republic, largest city of the Czech Republic and the historical capital of Bohemia. Prague, located on the Vltava River, has a population of about 1.4 million, while its P ...
under Professor František Josef Studnička. Until 1900, girls attended lectures for residential studies (without the status of regular students); in 1900, a new law enabled girls to take exams for the entire period of their studies. Fabianová graduated in November 1901 with a thesis in analytical mathematics becoming the first woman to earn a PhD in mathematics in the country. (In 1902, Anna Honzáková, a classmate of Fabianová's from Minerva, was the very first female with a doctoral degree to graduate from the Faculty of Medicine of Charles-Ferdinand University.) After graduation, Fabianová started teaching mathematics, physics and German at the Minerva gymnasium. At that time, the teaching profession was associated with a promise of celibacy, so Fabianová never married. She lived with her older sister Juliana Fabianová. In 1923, she separated from Minerva to become the director of the Second Czech Girls' Real Municipal Gymnasium. She held that position until she retired in 1929. In retirement, she participated in Czech social activities. She was a member of the Union of Czechoslovak Mathematicians and Physicists, the Association of Academically Educated Women and the Minerva Association. Marie Fabianová died on 7 April 1943 after a long illness in the General Faculty Hospital in Prague at the age of 70.


Selected publications


Scientific works

* ''On the discovery of Zeeman''. Journal for the cultivation of mathematics and physics. 1893. * ''On the development of diperiodic functions in infinite sums and products, in series and products''. Dissertation. FK Studnička. 1900.


Literary works

She allegedly used the pseudonym ''Dr. Abby Faimon''. * FAIMONOVA Abby ''History of Austrian education. Part 1-2'' of the Šolc handbook for teachers of public and municipal schools.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Fabianova, Marie 1872 births 1943 deaths People from Železný Brod Czech mathematicians Czech women educators Women educators 20th-century Czech mathematicians 20th-century Czech women Charles University alumni