Skip to main content
Log in

Russian Trace in the Family History and Work of Alexander Grothendieck

  • Published:
Journal of Mathematical Sciences Aims and scope Submit manuscript

In this note, based on archival documents, we supplement and clarify information about the father of Alexander Grothendieck, most of which is in the biography of Grothendieck, written by W. Scharlau. We managed to establish the real name, given at birth to Alexander Petrovich Shapiro and establish with certainty that he had at least three brothers. In addition, we found out the fate of A. P. Shapiro’s eldest son, David Alexandrovich, and established contact with his daughter. In the mid 90s, D.A. Shapiro dictated to her several pages of memoirs about his parents, where he told the real name of his father, grandmother, the history of acquaintance of parents and other information that he knew from the words of his mother.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  1. W. Scharlau, Who is Alexander Grothendieck?: Anarchy, Mathematics, Spirituality, Solitude A Biography. Part 1:Anarchy, Translated from German by Melissa Schneps (2011).

  2. Yu. I. Manin, “Forgotten Motives: the Varieties of scientific experience,” in: Alexandre Grothendieck: A Mathematical Portrait, (ed. Leila Schneps), International Press, Boston (2014).

  3. Ju. I. Manin, “Correspondences, motifs and monoidal transformations,” Mat. Sb., 77(119), 475–507 (1968).

  4. G. V. Belyi, “Galois extensions of a maximal cyclotomic field,” Izv. Akad. Nauk SSSR Ser. Mat., 43, No. 2, 267–276 (1979).

    MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  5. V. G. Drinfeld, “On quasitriangular quasi-Hopf algebras and on a group that is closely connected with Gal \( \left(\overline{\mathbb{Q}}/\mathbb{Q}\right) \),” Algebra Analiz, 2, No. 4, 829–860 (1991).

  6. “The divine spark. Georgy Shabat interviewed by Olga Orlova,” [In Russian], Troitsky Variant, 249, No. 5 (2018); https://trv-science.ru/uploads/249N.pdf.

  7. GARF file 533, op. 3, d. 3289: Shapiro Alexandr Petrovich (Sasha).

  8. Vedomost Spravok o Sudimosti Ministry of Justice, 9, Saint-Petersburg (1913); https://dlib.rsl.ru/viewer/01005494714#?page=454.

  9. Vedomost Spravok o Sudimosti Ministry of Justice, 2, Saint-Petersburg (1913); https://dlib.rsl.ru/viewer/01005494654#?page=315.

  10. Vedomost Spravok o Sudimosti Ministry of Justice, 12, Saint-Petersburg (1909); https://dlib.rsl.ru/viewer/01005470082#?page=266.

  11. Katorzhny Oryol Central: Memoirs of Former Prosoners, 1908–1917, The Society of Former Political Prisoners (1929).

  12. GAYaO file 335, op. 1 d. 2550.

  13. Commemorative Book of the Kiev Educational District for 1901, Part 4, Type-lithographic company I. N. Kushnerev and K° (1901).

  14. I. I. Genkin, In the Cells of the Oryol Central: Memories of a Political Prisoner, [in Russian], Party Publishing House of the Central Black Earth District, Voronezh (1934); https://www.prlib.ru/item/322669.

  15. V. A. Antonov-Ovseenko, Notes on the Civil War: Volume 2, GosIzdat, Moscow–Leningrad (1928).

    Google Scholar 

  16. N. E. Kakurin, Kak Srazhalas Revolutsiy, 1 [in Russian], Gosizdat, Moscow (1924).

    Google Scholar 

  17. V. V. Dublennyh, Red Army in the Urals [in Russian], Yekaterinburg (2002).

  18. GARF, file 30, op. 1, B/18, d. 116, p. 71.

  19. A. V. Kupriyanov, Anglo-Indian Intervention in the Trans-Caspian Region in 1918–1919 [in Russian], Ph. D. Thesis, MGPU, Moscow (2015).

  20. The Red Book of the Cheka. Volume 1 [in Russian], Moscow (1920).

  21. A. V. Arolovich, “The concept of word and language among Russian universalist anarchists of the early XXc,” [in Russian], The Bulletin of Moscow University, Ser. 19, Linguistics and Cross-Cultural Communication, No. 3 (2001).

  22. Zvenya. Historical Almanakhc. Issue 1, Progress, Phoenix, Atheneum, Moscow (1991).

  23. I. E. Milkin, My Years is My Wealth [in Russian], MSBooks Publishing (2012).

  24. GARF, file 10035, op. 2, d. 30547.

  25. Saint-Petersburg State University archive, file 1 op. l/d stud. d/o fin. 1930–41, sv. 16, d. 585, Shapiro D. A.

  26. G. P. Maximoff, The guillotine at work. Vol. 2: Twenty Years of Terror in Russia (Data and Documents), The Chicago Section of the Alexander Berkman Fund, Chicago (1940).

  27. State Archive of Tula Oblast, file R-2272, op. 1, d. 1., p. 151; d. 9., p. 152.

  28. F. Dzerzhinsky, Diaries. Letters, Comp. A. A. Plekhanov, A. M. Plekhanov, Moscow (2007).

  29. B. N. Enikeev, “Petrophysical forum,” http://petrophysics.borda.ru/?1-7-0-00000009-005.

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to M. Gavrilovich.

Additional information

Dedicated to Ivan Alexandrovich Panin

Translated from Zapiski Nauchnykh Seminarov POMI, Vol. 484, 2019, pp. 23–44.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Gavrilovich, M., Pimenov, K. & Volk, E. Russian Trace in the Family History and Work of Alexander Grothendieck. J Math Sci 252, 761–774 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10958-021-05196-7

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10958-021-05196-7

Navigation