Vyučovat umění inženýrskému se v českých zemích začalo už před třemi stoletími. První titul císařského inženýra-profesora inženýrství byl udělen v prosinci 1706 zkušenému fortifikačnímu odborníkovi Christianu Josefu Willenbergovi. První ženě se stejného uznání dostalo u nás teprve v roce 1960. Byla jí tehdy třiapadesátiletá Adéla Kochanovská., Ivo Kraus., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
Sofia Kovalevskaya was not only a great Russian mathematician, but also a writer and advocate of women's rights in the 19th century. After concluding her sexondary schooling, Sofia was determined to continue her education at the university level. She travelled to Heidelberg to study mathematics, but discovered there that as a woman she could not graduate. In 1870 she moved to Berlin to study with Karl Meierstrass, in 1874 she was granted a Ph.D. from the Göttingen University. In 1883 she received an invitation from Gösta Mittag-Leffler to lecture at the University of Stockholm. Sophia's most famous work is on the theory of partial differential equations, and on the rotation of a solid body about a fixed point. Sophia died very young, at the age of 41, from pneumonia., Ivo Kraus., and Obsahuje bibliografii