Akio Hattori
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Akio Hattori
Summary
Akio Hattori is a human[1]. He was born in Tokyo[2]. He was born on January 1, 1929[3]. He died on August 25, 2013[4]. He worked as a mathematician[5]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month, #7,293 of 1,000,298).[6]
Key Facts
- Born in Tokyo[2], Akio Hattori…
- Akio Hattori was born on January 1, 1929[3].
- Akio Hattori died on August 25, 2013[4].
- Akio Hattori held citizenship in Japan[7].
- Akio Hattori held citizenship in Empire of Japan[8].
- Akio Hattori worked as a mathematician[5].
- Akio Hattori was employed by University of Tokyo[9].
- Among Akio Hattori's employers was Meiji University[10].
- Akio Hattori's education included a stint at University of Tokyo[11].
- Akio Hattori's doctoral advisor was Shokichi Iyanaga[12].
- Akio Hattori is recorded as male[13].
- Akio Hattori's instance of is recorded as human[14].
- Akio Hattori supervised Shigeyuki Morita as a doctoral student[15].
- Akio Hattori supervised Yoshihiko Mitsumatsu as a doctoral student[16].
- Akio Hattori supervised Mikio Furuta as a doctoral student[17].
- The cause of death was cancer[18].
- Akio Hattori's manner of death is recorded as natural causes[19].
- Akio Hattori's name in native language is recorded as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '服部晶夫'}[20].
- Akio Hattori's name in kana is recorded as はっとり あきお[21].
- Akio Hattori's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as WikiProject Mathematics[22].
Body
Origins and Family
Akio Hattori's place of birth was Tokyo[2]. He was born on January 1, 1929[3].
Education
Akio Hattori was educated at University of Tokyo[11]. His doctoral advisor was Shokichi Iyanaga[12].
Career and Affiliations
Akio Hattori's professions included mathematician[5]. Employers include University of Tokyo[9], a research university[23], in Japan[24], founded in 1877[25], headquartered in Hongō campus[26] and Meiji University[10], a private university[27], in Japan[28], founded in 1881[29]. Doctoral students include Shigeyuki Morita[15], a mathematician[30], b. 1946[31], awarded the Autumn Prize[32]; Yoshihiko Mitsumatsu[16], b. 1957[33]; and Mikio Furuta[17], a university teacher[34], b. 1960[35], of Japan[36].
Death and Burial
Akio Hattori died on August 25, 2013[4]. The cause of death was cancer[18].
Why It Matters
Akio Hattori ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month, #7,293 of 1,000,298).[6]
FAQs
Where was Akio Hattori born?
Akio Hattori was born in Tokyo[2].
What did Akio Hattori do for work?
Akio Hattori worked as mathematician[5].
Where did Akio Hattori go to school?
Akio Hattori was educated at University of Tokyo[11].