Ioannis Papadakis

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Ioannis Papadakis
Bornc. 1820
Tzitzifes, Crete
Died1876
Athens, Greece
NationalityGreek
Alma materUniversity of Munich
Ecole Polytechnique
Ecole des Mines
University of Athens
Parent
  • Giorgios Papadakis (father)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
Astronomy
Descriptive geometry
InstitutionsUniversity of Athens
Athens Polytechnic
National Observatory of Athens
Academic advisorsKonstantinos Negris

Ioannis G. Papadakis (c. 1820 – 1876 Greek: Ιωάννης Παπαδάκης) was a writer, mathematician, physicist, astronomer, meteorologist, and professor. He was the second director of the National Observatory of Athens. He temporarily succeeded Georgios Konstantinos Vouris until Johann Friedrich Julius Schmidt replaced him as the third director of the observatory. His most notable work was the observation of the Moons of Jupiter and other meteorological observations in the 1850s. He was also a Scottish rite freemason.[1][2][3][4]

Biography[edit]

Ioannis was born on the island of Crete around 1820. The Greek War of Independence broke out the same period. His father Giorgios was an active participant in the revolution. Giorgios nickname was Ksepapas. He was a commander in Greek War of Independence around 1821. He was also responsible for the Greek rebel's economic affairs. He represented the island of Crete as a proxy in the Second National Assembly held in Astros Kynourias between 29 March and 18 April 1823. Giorgios was killed in Gramvousa several years later during the Greek Revolution. From a young age, Ioannis showed an interest in the sciences. Ioanni's mentor was Greek physics professor Konstantinos Negris. He advised him to study in Munich.[5][6]

Ioannis traveled to Germany and studied at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich from 1833 to 1837.[7] He studied mathematics and astronomy. He briefly returned to Athens and finished a master's degree at the University of Athens. He studied mathematics and physics. He excelled in his studies and the Greek government paid for him to complete his studies at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. In 1842, he traveled to Paris and attended the elite prestigious institutions Ecole Polytechnique (1842) and the Ecole des Mines (1844). Joseph Bertrand and Auguste Bravais were professors at the Ecole Polytechnique at the time. Francois Arago was also affiliated with the school and Greek physicist Dimitrios Stroumpos studied at the university a decade earlier. When Ioannis returned to Greece he was assistant to Georgios Konstantinos Vouris at the National Observatory of Athens.[6]

Ioannis began teaching at the University of Athens in 1850. He taught astronomy and analysis.[8] The Greek government was constantly unstable. The people disliked the new monarch King Otto. The Greek revolt of 1843 was an important event because all foreign professors were expelled from the University of Athens around the same period. The world-renowned astronomer Georgios Konstantinos Vouris was Greek-Austrian. He was from the same country as the King of Greece King Otto. The University of Athens was constantly drawn into political debate. Regrettably, Georgios Konstantinos Vouris was the victim of politics. He resigned his position as director of the National Observatory of Athens and moved back to Austria. Papadakis assumed the position as director for three years from 1855 to 1858. The faculty of the University of Athens, Georgios Sinas and his son Simon Sinas pleaded with Vouris to return to the observatory but Vouris declined. Simon Sinas and Vouris were allowed to choose his predecessor. They chose German astronomer Johann Friedrich Julius Schmidt. Papadakis did not want to stay in the position because it was demanding and he was a full-time faculty member at two universities at the time he worked at the University of Athens and the Athens Polytechnic University.[6][9][10]

During the 1850s Papadakis was an assistant to Vouris. He did extensive meteorological research and published some of his works. He also helped Vouris conduct his research. During the same period, he introduced complex descriptive geometry to his students at the university. Records indicate he taught descriptive geometry at the Athens Polytechnic University from 1853 and 1856. He taught the new mathematical methods introduced in France. He influenced Nikolaos Ch. Nikolaidis, Cyparissos Stephanos, Vassilios Lakon and John Hazzidakis.[6]

Papadakis resigned in protest in 1856 when Joseph Mindler (1808–1868) a Bavarian officer of the royal court and stenographer of the Parliament was hired to teach stenography. Mindler was paid a significantly higher salary than Papadakis. The government in response offered to pay Papadakis higher wages. On 10 May 1859 a political incident rocked the university community when the students were involved in a massive protest called the skiadika (σκιαδικά). Several years later in October 1862, King Otto was exiled to never return to Greece. Papadakis and the college community continued to flourish. Papadakis became dean of the Philosophical School twice and he also became president of the University of Athens right before his death in the academic year 1876–1877. He wrote for several publications in Greece. He wrote about his observations of the moons of Jupiter and published it in the Greek paper Logodos (Λογοδος). He also published meteorological observations in local Greek newspapers and was a member of the Greek archeological society.[2]

Literary works[edit]

Books and Articles authored by Ioannis Papadakis
Date Title Title in English
1851–53 Παρατηρήσεις επι Τών Δορθφόρων τού Διός (Λογοδος) Observations of the Moons of Jupiter published in Logodos (Λογοδος)
1857 Suite Régulière d'observations Météorologiques Faites à l'Observatoire d'Athènes Series of Meteorological Observations made in Athens
1861–1871 Διάφορες Μετεωρολογικές Παρατηρήσεις (Ελληνικές Εφημερίδες) Meteorological Observations (Greek Newspapers)
1866 Εθνικόν Ημερολόγιον Βρετού Astronomical Observations for the National Greek Calendar

References[edit]

  1. ^ Triandafillos Sklavenitis (October 5, 2022). "Papadakis Ioannis". Institute for Neohellenic Research. Retrieved October 5, 2022.
  2. ^ a b Stefanidou 1952, pp. 11.
  3. ^ Drummond, Paige & Moriarty 1877, pp. 275.
  4. ^ Theodossiou, Manimanis & Mantarakis 2007, pp. 123.
  5. ^ Staff Writers (October 5, 2022). "Papadakis Ioannis". Municipality of Apokeronas. Retrieved October 5, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d Volkert, Menghini & Barbin 2019, pp. 127.
  7. ^ Freninger 1872, pp. 237.
  8. ^ Volkert, Menghini & Barbin 2019, pp. 125.
  9. ^ Matsopoulos 2012, pp. 411.
  10. ^ Harvey & Matsopoulos 2020, pp. 16.

Bibliography[edit]