Mileva Marić
Mileva Marić | |
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Милева Марић | |
Marić in 1896 | |
| Born | Mileva Marić 19 December 1875 |
| Died | 4 August 1948 (aged 72) Zürich, Switzerland |
| Resting place | Friedhof Nordheim, Zürich |
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Mileva Marić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милева Марић, pronounced [milěːva mǎːritɕ]; 19 December 1875 – 4 August 1948), sometimes called Mileva Marić-Einstein (Милева Марић-Ајнштајн, Mileva Marić-Ajnštajn), was a Serbian physicist and mathematician. She showed intellectual aptitude from a young age and studied at Zürich Polytechnic in a highly male dominated field, after having studied medicine for one semester at Zürich University. Her studies included differential and integral calculus, descriptive and projective geometry, mechanics, theoretical physics, applied physics, experimental physics, and astronomy. One of her study colleagues at university was her future husband Albert Einstein, to whose early work Marić is thought by some to have contributed (in particular the annus mirabilis papers).