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prevented him from going to conferences abroad, and he had to try to do his work by mail. He focused on his students, various research projects and the new area of computer algebra. His students very much enjoyed his lectures. In the mid 1980s his son
Mikhail came under government scrutiny due to Mikhail's interest in religion, which did not make things easier for his father. Eventually Kaluznin was forced to retire and moved back to Moscow. His health deteriorated, and he died as a result of burns from an accident.
212:, Bavaria. Conditions here were much more difficult than in the internment camp back in France. His mother was able to send him food while he was at the concentration camp. Otherwise, he might not have survived. After the war, Kaluznin returned to Paris. He got some work translating for the Soviet Embassy in Paris but was finally able to return to his mathematical studies. In 1948, he defended his doctoral dissertation on Sylow
262:-subgroups of symmetric groups. Complete products of groups. Generalizations of Galois theory.’ In 1959 he created and became head of the department of algebra and mathematical logic; he also promoted the creation of a department of mathematical linguistics at the state university, maybe due to his marriage in 1962 to linguist Zoya Mikhailovna Volotskaya. They lived separate most of their life but did have two children.
148:(present-day Saint Petersburg), where she brought him up. She shared her love for Russian culture, including music and literature, with her son, and she would remain an important part of his life. In 1923, Kaluznin and his mother moved to Germany. She worked as a governess, while Kaluznin was enrolled at a
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Outside of mathematics, Kaluznin had many interests. He loved classical music, philosophy and western literature. Until 1970, he was a very heavy smoker, sometimes smoking as many as 60 cigarettes a day. Finally, on 1 January 1970, he stopped and never smoked again. He was a good dresser and enjoyed
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Due to his time abroad in
Germany and France, he was seen as a foreigner. In the 1970s, after openly pronouncing his opinion against closed political trials, he had to leave a couple of the positions he had, including his position as head of department of algebra and mathematical logic. This
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Kaluznin was born in Moscow. His parents divorced not long after his birth, and his father, Arkadii Rubin, moved to
England and was not part of Kaluznin's life. His mother, Maria Pavlovna Kaluznina, moved with the young Kaluznin to
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in June 1940 made it necessary for him to halt his studies. To make a living, he trained as an electrician. On 22 June 1941, Soviet citizens living in France were interned at a camp in
285:-subgroups of symmetric groups and even mathematical linguistics. Despite not being able to go to many conferences he contributed to the application of computers in algebra. The
205:, which determines if certain equation solutions can be written with rational functions. He also attended lectures on a variety of topics given by other prisoners.
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Kaluznin and his mother decided to move back to the USSR. They applied to the Soviet immigration authorities, who requested that he should work in
227:, where there was a shortage of scientists, for some time. In 1951, Kaluznin returned to Humboldt University in Berlin. Here, he held a post of
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Sushchanskii, V.I.; Lazebnik, F.G.; Ustimenko, V.A.; Klin, M.; Pöschel, R.; Vyshenskii, V.A. (1998). "Lev Arkad'evich Kalužnin (1914–1990)".
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Finally, in 1955, Kaluznin was able to return to the USSR. Various mathematicians worked on his behalf to get him a professorship at
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Aleksandrov, P. S.; Gnedenko, B. V.; Golovin, O. N. (1974). "LEV ARKAD'EVICH KALUZHNIN (on the occasion of his sixtieth birthday)".
154:(secondary school), graduating in 1933. His school offered a thorough education in mathematics, and upon graduating, he entered the
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is sometimes called the "Krasner-Kaloujnine universal embedding theorem" due to his joint proof of the theorem with Marc
Krasner.
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near Paris. Here, Kaluznin was initially able to continue studying mathematics, carrying out research on
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216:-subgroups of symmetric groups. In the following years, he published several papers, some of them with
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Kaluznin's research spread wide most notably in group theory and abstract groups. He worked on the
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In 1938, Kaluznin and his mother moved to Paris, where
Kaluznin became a student at the
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Wielandt, Helmut (1936). "Zur
Theorie der einfach transitiven Permutationsgruppen".
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Academic staff of the Taras
Shevchenko National University of Kyiv
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Faradzev, I.A; Ivanov, A.A; Klin, M.; Woldar, A.J (29 June 2013).
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In March 1942, Kaluznin was moved to a concentration camp in
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Investigations in
Algebraic Theory of Combinatorial Objects
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Investigations in
Algebraic Theory of Combinatorial Objects
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Academic staff of the
Humboldt University of Berlin
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69:Léo Kaloujnine, Lev A. Kalužnin, Lev A. Kaluzhnin
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538:Humboldt University of Berlin alumni
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332:"Lev Arkad'evich Kaluznin biography"
131:, while he used the transliteration
123:of his name used by himself include
338:from the original on 20 August 2018
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390:10.1070/rm1974v029n04abeh001294
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548:Soviet expatriates in Germany
413:Acta Applicandae Mathematicae
156:Humboldt University of Berlin
553:Soviet expatriates in France
533:University of Hamburg alumni
370:Russian Mathematical Surveys
287:universal embedding theorem
85:Zoya Mikhailovna Volotskaya
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195:German occupation of Paris
448:Mathematische Zeitschrift
178:on the classification of
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111:Lev Arkad'evich Kaluznin
25:Lev Arkad'evich Kaluznin
425:10.1023/A:1005990520840
139:Biography and education
116:Лев Аркадьевич Калужнин
193:and in particular the
513:Soviet mathematicians
256:Kiev State University
246:, or full professor.
16:Soviet mathematician
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270:red wine and beer.
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454:: 582–587.
168:Erich Hecke
160:Issai Schur
74:Citizenship
507:Categories
342:16 January
303:References
164:Emil Artin
37:1914-01-31
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210:Wahlsburg
199:Compiègne
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129:Kaluzhnin
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187:Sorbonne
125:Kalužnin
378:Bibcode
77:Russian
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238:thesis
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