Joseph Tilly
Mathematician, military person
Intro | Mathematician, military person | |
Places | Belgium | |
was | Mathematician | |
Work field | Mathematics | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 16 August 1837 | |
Death | 4 August 1906 (aged 69 years) |
Joseph Marie de Tilly (16 August 1837 – 4 August 1906) was a Belgian military man and mathematician.
He was born in Ypres, Belgium. In 1858, he became a teacher in mathematics at the regimental school. He began with studying geometry, particularly Euclid's fifth postulate and non-Euclidean geometry. He found similar results as Lobachevsky in 1860, but the Russian mathematician was already dead at that time. Tilly is more known for his work on non-Euclidean mechanics, as he was the one who invented it. He worked thus alone on this topic until a French mathematician named Jules Hoüel showed interest in that field. Tilly also wrote on military science and history of mathematics. He died in München, Germany.