Pierre-Dominique Bazaine Scientist

Pierre-Dominique Bazaine (1786 - 1838) (Пётр Петрович Базен) was a French scientist and engineer. He was educated at the École polytechnique in Paris as an engineer. At the request of Alexander I of Russia he was sent to Russia by Napoleon I as an army officer in the engineering corps to set up an institute for the education of transportation engineers, and in 1824 he became its director. Bazaine remained in Russia until 1834, organizing transportation routes and directing the work of inland navigation. He was responsible for many of the bridges of St. Petersburg and its outskirts (including a number of the small and elegant lightweight iron bridges in the Summer Garden), as well as other major civil engineering projects, including flood protection. He received many Honours and Awards for his extensive contribution to the infrastructure of Russia, as well as Honorary Fellowship of a number of science academies across Europe for his ground-breaking mathematical theses. He finally returned to France in 1834 and died in Paris aged 52 in 1838.

Personal facts

Pierre-Dominique Bazaine
Birth dateJanuary 13, 1786
Birth place
France , Scy-Chazelles
Nationality
France
Citizenship
France
Date of deathSeptember 29, 1838
Place of death
Paris , France
Residence
Russian Empire
Education
École Polytechnique
Known for
First Engineer Bridge

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Scientist

awards
Order of St. Vladimir
Legion of Honour
Order of the White Eagle (Poland)
Order of the Red Eagle
Order of St. Alexander Nevsky
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Field of study
Mathematician
Engineer

Pierre-Dominique Bazaine on Wikipedia