Albert Châtelet

Albert Châtelet
Born 24 October 1883
Valhuon, Pas-de-Calais
Died June 30, 1960 (aged 76)
Paris
Nationality French
Fields Mathematics
Alma mater École Normale Supérieure
Doctoral advisor Jules Tannery
Doctoral students André Néron
Marcel-Paul Schützenberger

Albert Châtelet (24 October 1883 – 30 June 1960) was a French politician and mathematician. Châtelet was a student at the École Normale Supérieure from 1905 to 1908, succeeding to the Agrégation (a highly selective competitive examination for future high-school teachers) in 1908. After earning a doctorate in 1911 and serving first in the health service, then in a ballistic research unit during the First World War, Châtelet became a lecturer at École centrale de Lille and a professor at Université de Lille, rising to the rank of Vice-Chancellor by 1924. After thirteen years of chancellorship he was appointed as the Director of Secondary Education by the Ministry of National Education, where he served under Jean Zay until 1940. In 1945 he joined the Faculty of Science at the University of Paris, succeeding Jean Cabannes as its Dean in 1949. After his retirement as Dean in 1954 Châtelet began participating in political movements at the forefront of the downfall of the French Fourth Republic by joining the Rationalist Union in 1955. In 1958 Albert Châtelet was chosen to represent the Union of Democratic Forces as its candidate during the French presidential election. He earned only 8.4% of the vote, losing out to the Union of Democrats for the Republic candidate Charles de Gaulle.

One of his sons was the mathematician François Châtelet, who is not to be confused with the French philosopher of the same name.

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