Évariste Galois
' father Nicholas Gabriel Galois and his mother Adelaide Marie Demante were both intelligent and well educated in philosophy, classical literature and religion. However there is no sign of any mathematical ability in any of Galois' family. His mother served as Galois' sole teacher until he was
12
years old. She taught him Greek, Latin and religion where she imparted her own scepticism to her son. Galois' father was an important man in the community and in
1815
he was elected mayor of Bourg-la-Reine.
You can see a map of Paris in the
19
th
Century, showing Bourg-la-Reine at
THIS LINK
.
The starting point of the historical events which were to play a major role in Galois' life is surely the storming of the Bastille on
14
July
1789
. From this point the monarchy of Louis
16
th
was in major difficulties as the majority of Frenchmen composed their differences and united behind an attempt to destroy the privileged establishment of the church and the state.
Despite attempts at compromise Louis
16
th
was tried after attempting to flee the country. Following the execution of the King on
21
January
1793
there followed a reign of terror with many political trials. By the end of
1793
there were
4595
political prisoners held in Paris. However France began to have better times as their armies, under the command of Napoleon Bonaparte, won victory after victory.
Napoleon became first Consul in
1800
and then Emperor in
1804
. The French armies continued a conquest of Europe while Napoleon's power became more and more secure. In
1811
Napoleon was at the height of his power. By
1815
Napoleon's rule was over. The failed Russian campaign of
1812
was followed by defeats, the Allies entering Paris on
31
March
1814
. Napoleon abdicated on
6
April and Louis XVIII was installed as King by the Allies. The year
1815
saw the famous one hundred days. Napoleon entered Paris on March
20
, was defeated at Waterloo on
18
June and abdicated for the second time on
22
June. Louis XVIII was reinstated as King but died in September
1824
, Charles X becoming the new King.
Galois was by this time at school. He had enrolled at the Lycée of Louis-le-Grand as a boarder in the
4
th class on
6
October
1823
. Even during his first term there was a minor rebellion and
40
pupils were expelled from the school. Galois was not involved and during
1824
-
25
his school record is good and he received several prizes. However in
1826
Galois was asked to repeat the year because his work in
rhetoric
was not up to the required standard.
February
1827
was a turning point in Galois' life. He enrolled in his first mathematics class, the class of Hypolyte Vernier
(1800
-
1875)
. He quickly became absorbed in mathematics and his director of studies wrote
It is the passion for mathematics which dominates him, I think it would be best for him if his parents would allow him to study nothing but this, he is wasting his time here and does nothing but torment his teachers and overwhelm himself with punishments.
Galois' school reports began to describe him as
singular, bizarre
,
original
and
closed
. It is interesting that perhaps the most original mathematician who ever lived should be criticised for being
original
. Vernier reported however
Intelligence, marked progress but not enough method.
In
1828
Galois took the examination of the École Polytechnique but failed. It was the leading University of Paris and Galois must have wished to enter it for academic reasons. However, he also wished to enter this school because of the strong political movements that existed among its students, since Galois followed his parents example in being an ardent republican.
Back at Louis-le-Grand, Galois enrolled in the mathematics class of
Louis Richard
. However he worked more and more on his own researches and less and less on his schoolwork. He studied
Legendre
's
Géométrie
and the treatises of
Lagrange
. As Richard was to report
This student works only in the highest realms of mathematics.
In April
1829
Galois had his first mathematics paper published on
continued fractions
in the
Annales de mathématiques
. On
25
May and
1
June he submitted articles on the algebraic solution of equations to the
Académie des Sciences
.
Cauchy
was appointed as referee of Galois' paper.
Tragedy was to strike Galois for on
2
July
1829
his father committed suicide. The priest of Bourg-la-Reine forged Mayor Galois' name on malicious forged epigrams directed at Galois' own relatives. Galois' father was a good natured man and the scandal that ensued was more than he could stand. He hanged himself in his Paris apartment only a few steps from Louis-le-Grand where his son was studying. Galois was deeply affected by his father's death and it greatly influenced the direction his life was to take.
A few weeks after his father's death, Galois presented himself for examination for entry to the École Polytechnique for the second time. For the second time he failed, perhaps partly because he took it under the worst possible circumstances so soon after his father's death, partly because he was never good at communicating his deep mathematical ideas. Galois therefore resigned himself to enter the École Normale, which was an annex to Louis-le-Grand, and to do so he had to take his Baccalaureate examinations, something he could have avoided by entering the École Polytechnique.
He passed, receiving his degree on
29
December
1829
. His examiner in mathematics reported:-
This pupil is sometimes obscure in expressing his ideas, but he is intelligent and shows a remarkable spirit of research.
His literature examiner reported:-
This is the only student who has answered me poorly, he knows absolutely nothing. I was told that this student has an extraordinary capacity for mathematics. This astonishes me greatly, for, after his examination, I believed him to have but little intelligence.
Galois sent
Cauchy
further work on the theory of equations, but then learned from
Bulletin de Férussac
of a posthumous article by
Abel
which overlapped with a part of his work. Galois then took
Cauchy
's advice and submitted a new article
On the condition that an equation be
soluble by radicals
in February
1830
. The paper was sent to
Fourier
, the secretary of the
Paris Academy
, to be considered for the Grand Prize in mathematics.
Fourier
died in April
1830
and Galois' paper was never subsequently found and so never considered for the prize.
Galois, after reading
Abel
and
Jacobi
's work, worked on the theory of
elliptic functions
and
abelian integrals
. With support from Jacques
Sturm
, he published three papers in
Bulletin de Férussac
in April
1830
. However, he learnt in June that the prize of the
Academy
would be awarded the Prize jointly to
Abel
(
posthumously
)
and to
Jacobi
, his own work never having been considered.
July
1830
saw a revolution. Charles
10
th
fled France. There was rioting in the streets of Paris and the director of École Normale, M. Guigniault, locked the students in to avoid them taking part. Galois tried to scale the wall to join the rioting but failed. In December
1830
M. Guigniault wrote newspaper articles attacking the students and Galois wrote a reply in the
Gazette des Écoles
, attacking M. Guigniault for his actions in locking the students into the school. For this letter Galois was expelled and he joined the Artillery of the National Guard, a Republican branch of the militia. On
31
December
1830
the Artillery of the National Guard was abolished by Royal Decree since the new King Louis-Phillipe felt it was a threat to the throne.
Two minor publications, an abstract in
Annales de
Gergonne
(
December
1830)
and a letter on the teaching of science in the
Gazette des Écoles
(
2
January
1831)
were the last publications during his life. In January
1831
Galois attempted to return to mathematics. He organised some mathematics classes in higher algebra which attracted
40
students to the first meeting but after that the numbers quickly fell off. Galois was invited by
Poisson
to submit a third version of his memoir on equation to the Academy and he did so on
17
January.
On
18
April
Sophie Germain
wrote a letter to her friend the mathematician
Libri
which describes Galois' situation.
.. the death of M.
Fourier
, have been too much for this student Galois who, in spite of his impertinence, showed signs of a clever disposition. All this has done so much that he has been expelled form École Normale. He is without money... . They say he will go completely mad. I fear this is true.
Late in
1830
19
officers from the Artillery of the National Guard were arrested and charged with conspiracy to overthrow the government. They were acquitted and on
9
May
1831
200
republicans gathered for a dinner to celebrate the acquittal. During the dinner Galois raised his glass and with an open dagger in his hand appeared to make threats against the King, Louis-Phillipe. After the dinner Galois was arrested and held in Sainte-Pélagie prison. At his trial on
15
June his defence lawyer claimed that Galois had said
To Louis-Phillipe, if he betrays
but the last words had been drowned by the noise. Galois, rather surprisingly since he essentially repeated the threat from the dock, was acquitted.
The
14
th
of July was Bastille Day and Galois was arrested again. He was wearing the uniform of the Artillery of the National Guard, which was illegal. He was also carrying a loaded rifle, several pistols and a dagger. Galois was sent back to Sainte-Pélagie prison. While in prison he received a rejection of his memoir.
Poisson
had reported that:-
His argument is neither sufficiently clear nor sufficiently developed to allow us to judge its rigour.
He did, however, encourage Galois to publish a more complete account of his work. While in Sainte-Pélagie prison Galois attempted to commit suicide by stabbing himself with a dagger but the other prisoners prevented him. While drunk in prison he poured out his soul
Do you know what I lack my friend? I confide it only to you: it is someone whom I can love and love only in spirit. I have lost my father and no one has ever replaced him, do you hear me...?
In March
1832
a cholera epidemic swept Paris and prisoners, including Galois, were transferred to the pension Sieur Faultrier. There he apparently fell in love with Stephanie-Felice du Motel, the daughter of the resident physician. After he was released on
29
April Galois exchanged letters with Stephanie, and it is clear that she tried to distance herself from the affair.
The name Stephanie appears several times as a marginal note in one of Galois' manuscripts. See
THIS LINK
.
Galois fought a duel with Perscheux d'Herbinville on
30
May, the reason for the duel not being clear but certainly linked with Stephanie.
A marginal note in the margin of the manuscript that Galois wrote the night before the duel reads
There is something to complete in this demonstration. I do not have the time.
(
Author's note
)
.
You can see this note at
THIS LINK
.
It is this which has led to the legend that he spent his last night writing out all he knew about
group theory
. This story appears to have been exaggerated.
Galois was wounded in the duel and was abandoned by d'Herbinville and his own seconds and found by a peasant. He died in Cochin hospital on
31
May and his funeral was held on
2
June. It was the focus for a Republican rally and riots followed which lasted for several days.
Galois' brother and his friend Chevalier copied his mathematical papers and sent them to
Gauss
,
Jacobi
and others. It had been Galois' wish that
Jacobi
and
Gauss
should give their opinions on his work. No record exists of any comment these men made. However the papers reached
Liouville
who, in September
1843
, announced to the
Academy
that he had found in Galois' papers a concise solution
...as correct as it is deep of this lovely problem: Given an irreducible equation of
prime
degree, decide whether or not it is soluble by radicals.
Liouville
published these papers of Galois in his Journal in
1846
.
The theory that Galois outlined in these papers is now called
Galois theory
.
R Taton, Biography in
Dictionary of Scientific Biography
(
New York
1970
-
1990)
. See
THIS LINK
.
H Wussing, Galois, in H Wussing and W Arnold,
Biographien bedeutender Mathematiker
(
Berlin,
1983)
.
P Dupuy, La Vie d'Evariste Galois,
Annales Scientifiques de l'École Normale Supérieure
13
(1896)
,
197
-
266
.
H M Edwards, A note on Galois theory,
Arch. Hist. Exact Sci.
41
(2)
(1990)
,
163
-
169
.
C A Infantozzi, Sur la mort d'Evariste Galois,
Rev. Histoire Sci. Appl.
21
(2)
(1968)
,
157
-
160
.
B M Kiernan, The Development of Galois Theory from Lagrange to Artin,
Archive for History of Exact Science
8
(1971)
,
40
-
154
.
A Malet, The genesis of group theory in the works of Galois
(
Catalan
)
,
Butl. Sec. Mat.
17
(1984)
,
52
-
88
.
L M Ng, Evariste Galois,
Math. Medley
22
(1)
(1995)
,
32
-
33
.
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(
Portuguese
)
,
Bol. Soc. Paran. Mat.
(2)
5
(2)
(1984)
,
63
-
92
.
T Rothman, Genius and Biographers : The Fictionalization of Evariste Galois,
Amer. Math. Monthly
89
(1982)
,
84
-
106
.
Sh. Kh. Mikhelovich, Evariste Galois's methodological and pedagogical views
(
Russian
)
,
Istor. Metodol. Estestv. Nauk
36
(1989)
,
93
-
95
.
R Taton, Evariste Galois et ses biographes : de l'histoire aux légendes, in
Un parcours en histoire des mathématiques: travaux et recherches
(
Nantes,
1993)
,
155
-
172
.
R Taton, Evariste Galois and his contemporaries,
Bull. London Math. Soc.
15
(2)
(1983)
,
107
-
118
.
R Taton, Sur les relations scientifiques d'Augustin Cauchy et d'Evariste Galois,
Rev. Histoire Sci. Appl.
24
(2)
(1971)
,
123
-
148
.
R Taton, Les relations d'Evariste Galois avec les mathématiciens de son temps,
Rev. Hist. Sci. Appl.
1
(1947)
,
114
-
130
.
J Tits, Evariste Galois : son oeuvre, sa vie, ses rapports avec l'Académie,
C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris Vie Académique
295
(
Suppl.
12)
(1982)
,
171
-
180
.