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Emma

Emma . by:kevontesmith. Her mom Kaufmann Noether , came from a wealthy family in Cologne. Her father, Max Noether , a professor at the University first name was Amalie, but she was known by her middle name of Emmy. Her mother, Ida Amalia of Erlangen, was an accomplished mathematician.

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Emma

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  1. Emma by:kevontesmith

  2. Her mom Kaufmann Noether, came from a wealthy family in Cologne. Her father, Max Noether, a professor at the University first name was Amalie, but she was known by her middle name of Emmy. Her mother, Ida Amalia • of Erlangen, was an accomplished mathematician. • Noether was born on March 23, 1882, in the small university town of Erlangen in southern Germany.

  3. Noether's childhood was unexceptional, going to school, learning domestic skills, and taking piano lessons. Since girls were not eligible to enroll in the gymnasium (college preparatory school), she attended the StädtischenHöherenTöchterschule, where she studied arithmetic and languages. In 1900 she passed the Bavarian state examinations with evaluations of "very good" in French and English (she received only a "satisfactory" evaluation in practical classroom conduct); this certified her to teach foreign languages at female educational institutions.

  4. The successful and congenial environment of the University of Göttingen ended in 1933, with the advent of the Nazis in Germany. Within months, anti-Semitic policies spread through the country. On April 7, 1933, Noether was formally notified that she could no longer teach at the university. She was a dedicated pacifist, and Weyl later recalled, "her courage, her frankness, her unconcern about her own fate, her conciliatory spirit were, in the midst of all the hatred and meanness, despair and sorrow surrounding us, a moral solace

  5. During the summer of 1934, Noether visited Göttingen to arrange shipment of her possessions to the United States. When she returned to Bryn Mawr in the early fall, she had received a two-year renewal on her teaching grant. In the spring of 1935, Noether underwent surgery to remove a uterine tumor. The operation was a success, but four days later, she suddenly developed a very high fever and lost consciousness. She died on April 14th, apparently from a post-operative infection. Her ashes were buried near the library on the Bryn Mawr campus.

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