Joseph Wolfgang von Deschwanden

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Born(1819-07-21)July 21, 1819
DiedApril 11, 1866(1866-04-11) (aged 46)
Occupations
  • Mathematician
  • Professor
  • Academic administrator
SpouseOttilie Grossbach (m. 1858)
Joseph Wolfgang von Deschwanden
Born(1819-07-21)July 21, 1819
DiedApril 11, 1866(1866-04-11) (aged 46)
Occupations
  • Mathematician
  • Professor
  • Academic administrator
SpouseOttilie Grossbach (m. 1858)
Children1 daughter

Joseph Wolfgang von Deschwanden (21 July 1819 – 11 April 1866) was a Swiss mathematician and educator. He was professor of applied mathematics and descriptive geometry, rector of the Zurich Industrial High School (Industrieschule), and the first director of the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School (ETH Zurich).

Von Deschwanden was born in Stans on 21 July 1819, the son of Louis Victor von Deschwanden, a captain, lawyer and amateur artist, and Carolina née von Deschwanden; his parents came from different branches of the Deschwanden family of Kerns. He was the eldest of four children and the older brother of Karl von Deschwanden and Theodor von Deschwanden.

After his early schooling in Stans, he attended the Catholic cantonal school of St. Gallen (1834–1837). In 1838 he was admitted to the second year of the Zurich Industrial High School (Industrieschule). After obtaining his diploma, he enrolled in 1840 at the University of Zurich. He became an assistant teacher of applied mathematics at the Industrial High School in 1841, and was appointed full professor the following year at the age of just 23. He served as rector of the school from 1847 to 1855. In 1858 he married Ottilie Grossbach, from a Lucerne family of teachers whose father, Ernst Grossbach, was originally from Bavaria; the couple had one daughter.[1]

Von Deschwanden acquired his extensive knowledge in mathematics and engineering through study trips to southern Germany, France, Belgium, and Great Britain. He was considered a gifted communicator who could captivate his students, and his contemporaries also regarded him as a landscape painter of considerable sensitivity.[1]

Role in founding ETH Zurich

During the planning work for the creation of a federal university, the president of the Zurich cantonal government, Alfred Escher, appointed von Deschwanden in 1851 to the expert commission. With his specialist knowledge in engineering, he played a key role in drafting the bill that led to the Federal Act on the Federal Polytechnic School of 1854, establishing the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School. He became its first director in 1855, serving concurrently as professor of descriptive geometry. He stepped down from the directorship in 1859 but retained his teaching position until his death.[1]

Later life

Bibliography

References

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