Anosov Pavel Petrovich

Pavel Petrovich Anosov

Anosov Pavel Petrovich (Russian: Аносов Павел Петрович) (10 of July 1796 (old style 29 of June),[1] Tver — 25 of May 1851 (old style 13 of May[2]) – Russian mining engineer, a scientist- metallurgist, a major organizer of the mining industry, a researcher at the nature of the Southern Urals, Tomsk governor. Family name is Anosov, name is Pavel and father's name is Petrovich.

Biography

Anosov was the son of a petty clerk, became an orphan 13 years old. When his father died he left four young children-orphans: two older brothers, Peter and Pavel, and two younger sisters. The orphans took over the education of their maternal grandfather – mining official Sabakin Lev Fedorovich which served as a mechanic in the Kama plants in Izhevsk and Votkinsk.[2]

The grandfather sent Pavel with his elder brother Peter in St. Petersburg Mining Cadet Corps in 1810. Peter died. The extraordinary abilities of Pavel was marked in the Corps and his special penchant for mathematics in which he made a great success as well as in other higher sciences.

In 1817 he completed a Mining corps (Mountain corps) and joined the Zlatoust state factories as a trainee. He took care of his younger sisters, two girls, the youngest of which soon gave in marriage. The other was remaining a virgin at the time of the death of Paul Anosov, was "in a morbid state of their home in the Ural factories".

Career in Zlatoust.

Monument in honor P.P. Anosov was erected in Zlatoust, Urals Military District, by Moscow sculptors A.P. Antropov and N.L. Strain and architect T.L. Shulgina on the 15 of December, 1954.[3][4]

After completion of the corps he worked in Zlatoust Mining District from 1817 to 1847:

According to the military ranks for twenty years Anosov was promoted from a trainee (lieutenant) to general's rank.[2]

Anosov won world renown for his writings on the manufacture of iron and his re-discovery of the secret of damaskene lost in the Middle Ages. He explained the effect of the chemical composition, structure and treatment of steel on its properties. His findings formed the basis for the science of quality steels. Anosov summed up his studies in his now classical treatise, ‘On Damaskene’ (1841), immediately translated into German and French.

Anosov was the first to use the microscope in studies into the structure of steel (1831), thus laying the foundation for the microscopic analysis of metals.

Anosov was elected a corresponding member of the Kazan University (1844) and an honorary member of the Kharkov University (1846).

References

  1. Главацкий М., Дашкевич Л. "Павел Аносов - известный и неизвестный". Наука и жизнь. Retrieved 2005.
  2. 1 2 3 Златоустовский индустриальный колледж им. П. П. Аносова. "Некролог". Сын Отечества. 1851. Т. XII. Декабрь. С. 38—42. Archived from the original on 2012-08-06. Retrieved 9 March 2008.
  3. From Russian Wikipedia article Аносов, Павел Петрович.
  4. Златоуст >> Памятник П. П. Аносову.

To see

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