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・ Jovan Grković-Gapon
・ Jovan Hadži
・ Jovan Hadži-Vasiljević
・ Jovan Haye
・ Jovan I. Deretić
・ Jovan Ilić
・ Jovan Ilić (disambiguation)
・ Jovan Jezerkić
・ Jovan Jovanov
・ Jovan Jovanović
・ Jovan Jovanović (footballer)
・ Jovan Jovanović (rower)
・ Jovan Jovanović Zmaj
・ Jovan Jugović
・ Jovan Kantul
Jovan Karamata
・ Jovan Karlo Villalba
・ Jovan Kastratović
・ Jovan Kavarić
・ Jovan Kirovski
・ Jovan Kostovski
・ Jovan Kratohvil
・ Jovan Krkobabić
・ Jovan Krneta
・ Jovan Kursula
・ Jovan Lazarević
・ Jovan Leacock
・ Jovan Lukić
・ Jovan Lučić
・ Jovan Maleševac


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Jovan Karamata : ウィキペディア英語版
Jovan Karamata

Jovan Karamata (; 1902–1967) was one of the greatest Serbian mathematicians of the 20th century. He is remembered for contributions to analysis, in particular, the Tauberian theory and the theory of slowly varying functions. Karamata was one of the founders of the Mathematical Institute of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts in 1946.
== Life ==
Jovan Karamata was born in Zagreb on February 1, 1902 in family descending from a merchant family from the city of Zemun which was then in Austria-Hungary and now in Serbia. The Karamata family origin is Aromanian, from Pyrgoi, Eordaia, West Macedonia.〔(The Greek Communities in former Yugoslavia (17th - 20th century) republication of article of ''Kathimerini'' newspaper, from 12th of July 1998 )〕 His family's business affairs on the borders of the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman empires were very well known. In 1914, he finished most of his primary school in Zemun but because of constant warfare on the borderlands, Karamata's father sent him, together with his brothers and his sister, to Switzerland for their own safety. In Lausanne, 1920, he finished primary school oriented towards mathematics and sciences. In the same year he enrolled at the Engineering faculty of Belgrade University and, after several years moved to the Philosophy and Mathematicians sector, where he graduated in 1925.
He spent the years 1927–1928 in Paris, as a fellow of the Rockefeller Foundation, and in 1928 he became Assistant for Mathematics at the Faculty of Philosophy of Belgrade University. In 1930 he became Assistant Professor, in 1937 Associate Professor and, after the end of World War II, in 1950 he became Full Professor. In 1951 he was elected Full Professor at the University of Geneva. In 1933 he became a member of Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts, Czech Royal Society in 1936, and Serbian Royal Academy in 1939 as well as a fellow of Serbian Academy of Sciences in 1948. He was one of the founders of the ''Mathematical Institute'' of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts in 1946.
Karamata was member of the Swiss, French and German mathematical societies, the French Association for the Development of Science, and the primary editor of the journal ''L’Enseignement Mathématique'' in Geneva. He also taught at the University of Novi Sad.
In 1931 he married Emilija Nikolajevic, who gave birth to their two sons and a daughter. His wife died in 1959. After a long illness, Karamata died on August 14, 1967 in Geneva. His ashes rest in his native town of Zemun.〔

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