Pasquale del Pezzo
Pasquale Del Pezzo, Duke of
Cajanello, (
1859–
1936), was "the most
Neapolitan of Neapolitan
Mathematicians".
He was born in
Berlin (where his father was a representative of the Neapolitan king) on
2 May 1859. He died in
Naples on 20 June
1936. His first wife was the
Swedish writer
A. C. Leffler, sister of the great mathematician
G. Mittag-Leffler (1846-1927).
At the
University of Naples, he received first a law degree in
1880 and then in
1882 a math degree. He became a pre-eminent professor at that university, teaching
Projective Geometry, and remained at that University, as rector, faculty president, etc.
He was mayor of Naples starting in
1919, and he became a senator in the
Kingdom of Naples.
His scientific achievements were few, but they reveal a keen ingenuity. He is remembered particularly for first describing what became known as a
Del Pezzo surface. He might have become one of the strongest mathematicians of that time, but he was distracted by politics and other interests.