Ferdinand Karl Schweikart


Ferdinand Karl Schweikart was a German jurist and amateur mathematician who developed an astral geometry before the discovery of non-Euclidean geometry.

Life and work

Schweikart, son of an attorney in Hesse, was educated in the school of his town. He went to the high school in Hanau and Waldeck before entering in 1796 to study law in the university of Marburg, where He attended lectures of the mathematics professor J.K.F. Hauff. He was awarded a doctorate in law at the university of Jena in 1798.
After practicing as a lawyer for a few years in Erbach, He was, from 1803 to 1807, instructor of the youngest prince of Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen. From 1809 He was university professor of jurisprudence successively at the universities of Giessen, Kharkiv, Marburg and Königsberg.
But Schweikart is best remembered for his works on mathematics: in 1807 he published . Then, in 1818 he wrote to Gauss, through his student Christian Ludwig Gerling, about a new geometry, called by him as astral geometry, where the sum of the angles of a triangle was less than 180º. He influenced the work of his nephew, the mathematician Franz Taurinus.