With the very
establishment of the Muslim Anglo Oriental College on
January 08, 1877, at Aligarh, Mathematics was recognized
as an important discipline, and the necessity to appoint
a Professor in the subject was strongly felt. According
to the Founder Sir Syed Ahmad Khan’s own report,
however, paucity of funds came in the way of appointing
a European as a Professor. However, Pandit Ram Shanker
Mishra was appointed Professor as early as 1884. Within
a year he was whisked away by Agra College, Agra, and
Professor Harold Cox joined as Professor of Mathematics
and Political Economy. He had been a student of Jesus
College, Cambridge, where he obtained Tripos of
Mathematics. Before joining Aligarh, Professor Cox had
served as Lecturer in several colleges and edited The
Cambridge Review. He resigned in 1887 to take up a
teaching job in England.
The renowned
mathematician Professor Jadav Chandra Chakravarti thus
joined the staff as Professor of Mathematics on January
01, 1888. In 1889 he was appointed as Registrar - a post
which he continued to hold at much inconvenience to
himself but to the great advantage to the institution.
Professor Chakravarti authored the most popular text
book in Mathematics, used throughout India for more than
100 years, and translated into many Indian and European
languages. He was the teacher of Dr. Sir Ziauddin Ahmad
who received Doctoral degrees from both India and
Europe. Using imaginatively fresh insight, Professor
Chakravarti worked for college curriculum in Mathematics
by treating the fundamental principles and examples
which had hitherto been inaccessible, unused or even
entirely unknown.
By 1910-11, the College had the
unique distinction of having on its staff as many as
three Professors of Mathematics, Mr. J.C. Chakravarti,
Dr. Ziauddin Ahmad and Mr. M.A. Aziz. Mr. Abdul Majeed
Kureishy was appointed as Assistant Professor in May
1910. Professor Chakravarti retired from the services of
the college on February 28, 1916. The Chakravarti Medal
was instituted in his honour.
One of the earliest mathematicians was Dr. Sir Ziauddin
Ahmad who, along with Professor Chakravarti founded the
first group of teachers and research workers whose main
interests were in Astronomy, History of Mathematics and
Theory of Functions. They carried out many innovations
in teaching and research. For the first time in 1890, a
society called M.A.O. College Mathematics Society was
formed with Dr. Ziauddin Ahmad as its President and Mr.
A.M. Kureishy as its Secretary.
The society has been continuing its activities and is
now known as Aligarh Mathematical Society.
The Department of Mathematics came
into existence on the elevation of M.A.O. College to the
status of a residential University in 1920. Thus the
department of Mathematics is amongst the oldest
departments of the University. Dr. Sir Ziauddin Ahmad
became the first Professor and Head of the Department of
Mathematics but soon was appointed as Pro-Vice
Chancellor, and Mr. A.M. Kureishy looked after the
department as acting head. In 1931, Professor Andre Weil
of France was inducted in the Department. The
appointment of Professor Andre Weil was a significant
turning point in the academic growth of the Department.
During his stay of about two years as head of the
department, he remodeled the syllabi, set up the Seminar
Library, and established a group of workers with
Professor D. D. Kosambi and Professor T. K.
Vijayraghavan as its members. It was unfortunate that
Professor Andre Weil took exception to an order of the
Vice Chancellor asking to perform election duty for the
student’s union, and resigned.
After the departure of Professor Andre Weil, Dr. Hans
Lasheim, from Berlin, took over charge of the
Department, and guided its multifarious activities for
three years. In 1935, Mr. A.M. Kureishy was again
appointed Head of the Department. In the same year Dr.
Ziauddin Ahmad became an Honorary Professor in the
Department, working simultaneously as Vice Chancellor of
the University. Because of his love for the subject, he
took his duties in the Department very seriously and
even found time to take a number of lectures both at the
undergraduate and postgraduate levels. During the period
1931-46, the Department took interest in developing
studies in Differential Geometry, Differential Equations
and the Theory of Functions of Complex Variables.
After the retirement of Mr. A.M. Kureishy in 1947, Dr.
N.M. Basu took over as Professor and Head of the
Department for a period of five years. During his
tenure, the staff position of the Department was
strengthened by the appointment of Dr. J.A. Siddiqui,
Dr. H.C. Gupta and Professor Raziuddin. The courses at
the postgraduate levels were bifurcated into two groups
namely, pure and applied mathematics. Practical work in
Statistics was also introduced. At the same time pure
and applied Statistics were introduced at the
undergraduate level.
It was in 1953 that Dr. S.M. Shah was
appointed as Professor and Head of the Department, and
continued to work in this capacity till 1958 when he
left to take up a teaching assignment in the United
States. During his period, some prominent academicians
like Professor U.N. Singh, Professor Q.I. Rehman and
Professor M.S. Ramanujan joined the Department. As a
result of this, the teaching and research potentials of
the department were substantially augmented. A Diploma
Course in Statistics was also introduced in 1957.
Professor Jamil A. Siddiqui took over as Head of the
Department in 1958 and occupied the position for eight
years. During this period this period, Dr. D. J.
Dickinson, University of Massachusetts (USA), joined the
Department under the Fulbright Bright scheme for one
academic year. The department organized for the first
time a summer school in 1965 for teachers in cooperation
with the Ford Foundation with a view to improve the
teaching of Mathematics in Colleges. Prof. Siddiqui's
outstanding contribution to the Department was the
emphasis on teaching of modern Mathematics which was
intiated with great favour by him.
When Professor Siddiqui went abroad in 1966 on long
leave, the mantle of leading the Department fell on
Professor M.A. Kazim who held the post for about six
years. He not only maintained the traditions of Modern
Mathematics in the Department, but also made valuable
contributions by developing specialization in Modern
Algebra - in both teaching and research. During his
tenure the Department of Mathematics and Statistics
moved to the present two story building. Dr. Surjeet
Singh, during this period, joined the Department as
Reader before becoming a Professor at Amritsar.
Dr. Saiyed Izhar Husain joined the
Department as Professor and Head in 1972, and brought in
great dynamism and innovations in teaching and research
activities. Notable improvements were made both in terms
of the physical amenities and the academic atmosphere in
the working of the Department, and a fruitful rapport
with the outside mathematics world was established. His
efforts resulted in placing the Department in the
forefront of Mathematics departments of the country - so
that the UGC ultimately recognized it as a Department of
Special Assistance in September 1983. Professor Husain
had been the Head of the Department for 12 years. He has
created a nucleus of researchers in the domain of
General Relativity and Differential Geometry. The
Department faced his sad demise in May 1994. The
University has instituted a scholarship in his memory
for postgraduate students of Mathematics.
After the introduction of the new system of appointment
of the Chairman in 1984, Professor Sarfaraz Umar became
the Chairman for a short period. He was followed by
Professor M. Mohsin (1984-1987), Professor A.H. Siddiqui
(1987-1990), Professor Z. U. Ahmad (1990-1993),
Professor M.Z. Khan (1993-1996, 2003-2005), Professor
M.A. Quadri (1996-1999), Prof.M.A. Pathan (1999-2002),
Prof. S.M.A. Zaidi (2002-2003, 2005-2006) -all of whom
served as Chairman, and under whom the Department
continued to make steady progress on all fronts
throughout the years. In August 2006, the present
Chairman Prof. H.H. Khan took charge.
The Seminar Library of the Department of Mathematics is
our prize possession indeed, and our claim is that it is
the most valuable mathematics library in any University
of the country. During the years which span over a
century, the Department has acquired more than 20,000
books on higher mathematics (this does not include books
for undergraduate studies available in Maulana Azad
Library - the main library of AMU). The Seminar Library
also contains 50 valuable collected works of eminent
mathematicians. Apart from steadily acquiring recent
books on advanced mathematics, it also receives more
than 150 periodicals through subscription and mutual
exchange. This number has gone down at present due to
price rise and devaluation of Indian currency. This
valuable collection of books and research journals,
along with readily available photocopying facilities,
have made the Seminar Library very popular among
teachers of mathematics and researchers from
neighbouring universities as well.
The Department has also been publishing a research
journal known as The Aligarh Bulletin of Mathematics
since 1971. This Bulletin regularly carries research
articles by mathematicians from India and abroad.
Professor M.A. Kazim was its founding Chief Editor. It
is published annually in one volume, and distributed to
all Indian Universities and some foreign institutions on
a free exchange basis. In return, the Department gets
more than 40 International Research Journals from
various universities.
The Department has an independent building which was
built in 1968. Besides office accommodation, the
building has 10 class rooms, 22 faculty chambers (each
equipped with PC and internet access), two committee
rooms and a seminar library.
During last some years, many foreign mathematicians have
visited our department, namely, Prof. Taqdir Husain
(Canada), Prof. W.H. Ruckle (USA), Prof. R.T.
Rockafellar (USA), Prof. M. Brokate (USA), Prof. F.
Moricz (Hungary), Prof. F. Schipp (Hungary), Prof. E.
Melkowsky (Germany), Prof. H.Neunzert (Germany), Prof.
S.M. Tariq Rizvi (USA), Prof. (Mrs.) A. Tali (Estonia),
Prof. F.F. Bazan (Chile), Prof. R. Lozi, Prof. Bresar
(Slovenia), Prof. J. Vukman (Slovenia), Prof. Arif Kaya
(Turkey), Prof. L. Cairini (Italy), Prof. Murabayashi
(Japan), Prof. J. Park (Korea), Prof. T. Kwark (Korea).
Prof. Maria Zeltser (Estonia).
Since 1976, the department has been holding various
National and International conference in every 2-3
years.
Faculty Members of the Department :
Professors Mohammad Zubair Khan
Professors Syed Mahmood Ahad Zaidi
Professors Huzoorul Hasnain Khan
Professors Afzal Beg
Professors Zafar Ahsan
Professors M. Mursaleen
Professors Fazal Mehdi
Professors Mohammad Imdad
Professors Mohammad Ashraf
Professors Qamrul Hasan Ansari
Dr. Noor Mohammad Khan
Dr. Mohammad Irfan
Dr. Shahid Ali
Dr. Viqar Azam Khan
Dr. (Mrs.) Asma Ali
Dr. Kaleem Raza Kazmi
Dr. Rais Ahmad
Dr. Khalid Ali Khan (E.O.L.)
Dr. (Mrs.) Subuhi Khan
Dr. Izhar Ahmad (E.O.L.)
Dr. M. K. Ahmad
Dr. Shakir Ali
Dr. Vakeel Ahmad Khan
Dr. Nadeem-ur-Rehman
Women’s College:
Dr. S.C. Gupta
Dr. (Mrs.) Alveera Mehdi
|