Jump to content

Henryk Merczyng

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henryk Merczyng
Born(1860-02-05)5 February 1860
Died14 September 1916(1916-09-14) (aged 56)
Other namesEdward Czyński
CitizenshipRussian
Alma materImperial University of Warsaw, St. Petersburg Institute of Communication Engineers
Scientific career
FieldsElectrical engineering
InstitutionsSt. Petersburg Institute for Communication Engineers, St. Petersburg Electrotechnical Institute, Russian Ministry of Communication

Henryk Merczyng (Russian: Генрих Карлович Мерчинг, alias Edward Czyński; 5 February 1860 – 14 September 1916) was a physicist, professor of electrical engineering at St. Petersburg Institute of Communication Engineers, pioneer of railway electrification projects, amateur historian and demographer.

Biography

[edit]

Merczyng was born on 5 February 1860 in Zgierz, Russian Empire (now Poland) to a Calvinist family of Jan Karol Merczyng and Matylda née Schlabic. His father was a known architect from Łęczyca County.[1] He graduated with honors from the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics at the Imperial University of Warsaw (1882) and continued his education at the St. Petersburg Institute of Communication Engineers. In 1883 he founded together with Władysław Natanson a semi-legal organization for Polish students (which later transformed into the Association of Polish Physicians and Naturalists (Polish: Związek Polskich Lekarzy i Przyrodników)).[2] After finishing his studies in 1885, he worked as a clerk at the Novaja Alexandrija train station (now Puławy). In 1887 he began teaching at his alma mater in St. Petersburg.[1][2]

Physicist and engineer

[edit]

In 1890 Merczyng started lecturing on electrical engineering and telegraphy. He established the first electrotechnical laboratory at the university. One of his lab assistants was the noted Polish hydrologist Alfred Rundo.[3] Since 1892 he was employed as an adjunct professor. He became an associate professor in 1896 and was granted full professorship in electrical engineering in 1904. During his career as a professor, he supervised some of the first diploma theses on the subjects of electric power systems (tramway, railway, and hydropower) and electrification of rolling stock repair plants. He also taught at the St. Petersburg Electrotechnical Institute.[2]

Merczyng was a State Councillor[4] and participated in works of the engineering council of the Russian Ministry of Communication. He was the main initiator of Russian railways electrification plans and developed pioneering projects in this area: the St. Petersburg junction, the Transcaucasus railways (1911), and the Moscow junction (1912).[2]

Some of Merczyng's research dealt with the theory of fluid flow through pipelines. The results of his studies were later used during the construction of Baku-Batumi oil pipeline. He also conducted comprehensive experiments in the field of optics and light waves (concerning mainly diffraction, wavelengths, and dispersion).[2][3]

He was a member of the Polish colony in St. Petersburg and belonged to the local Management Board of Polish Higher Courses.[2]

Historian and demographer

[edit]
Merczyng's (Edward Czyński's) map from the 1909 paper, 1912 reproduction.[5]

Merczyng took particular interest in the history of reformation in Poland, issues of demography and historical geography. He conducted research on these topics in libraries and archives both in the Russian Empire and Austria-Hungary.[2] In 1887 he authored his "Ethnographical-Statistical Outline of the Numerical Strength and Distribution of the Polish Population" (Polish: Etnograficzno-statystyczny zarys liczebności i rozsiedlenia ludności polskiej), which was republished with changes in 1909. The new edition included significantly different data for the Russian Empire's territory – the first version relied on church statistics, while the second repeated results of the 1897 Russian census.[6][7][5]

He is considered one of the pioneers of research on the history of Polish nontrinitarianism (especially Arianism).[2][8] His works on the Polish Reformation movement are valued mainly due to the large number of primary sources employed, many of which are now lost or no longer available.[2] Among his most important publications are: "Zbory i senatorowie protestanccy w dawnej Polsce" (1904)[2] (Protestant churches and senators in old Poland) and "Zbiór pomników reformacji kościoła polskiego i litewskiego" (Monumenta Reformationis Polonicae et Lithuanicae) (1911).

Merczyng, in cooperation with Jan Jakubowski, mathematically analyzed the Radziwiłł map of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[9]

Selected works

[edit]
  • "O własnościach ogniskowych siatek dyfrakcyjnych" (1882) (On focal properties of diffraction gratings)
  • Mikołaj Kopernik. Życie i działalność naukowa (1888) (Nicolaus Copernicus. Life and scientific activity)
  • "Zasady elektrotechniki" (1889) (Principles of electrotechnology)
  • "Dumania przyrodnika" (1900) (Reflections of the naturalist)
  • "Teorya prądu elektrycznego. Zarys zasadniczych praw ustalonego i nieustalonego prądu elektrycznego i towarzyszących mu zakłóceń magnetycznych. Podstawy elektromagnetycznej teoryi światła" (1905) (Electricity theory. Outline of the basic laws of established and unknown electric current and accompanying magnetic disturbances. Principles of electromagnetic theory of light)
  • "Podręcznik matematyczny szkół polskich za Zygmunta III" (1907) (Mathematics manual for Polish schools during rule of Sigismund III)
  • "The Unitarian movement in Poland from 1560-1660", International Congress of Free Christianity and Religious Progress (5th: 1910: Berlin, Germany)
  • "O zasadzie względności w pojęciu fizycznym czasu i przestrzeni. Hipotezy Lorentza i Einsteina" (1911) (On the principle of relativity in the physical meaning of time and space[10])
  • "Mapa Litwy z r. 1613 ks. Radziwiłła Sierotki pod względem matematycznym i kartograficznym" (1913) (Prince Radziwiłł's 1613 map of Lithuania from mathematical and cartographic point of view)
  • "Szymon Budny jako krytyk tekstów biblijnych" (1913) (Szymon Budny as critic of biblical texts)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Zuzga, Włodzimierz (1987). "Henryk Merczyng. Życie i działalność naukowa". Kwartalnik Historii Nauki I Techniki (in Polish). 32 (3–4). PAN: 692–693. ISSN 0023-589X.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Kubiatowski, Jerzy; Tazbir, Janusz (1975). "Henryk Merczyng". Polski Słownik Biograficzny (Polish Biographical Dictionary). Vol.20 (in Polish). PAN.
  3. ^ a b Zuzga 1987, p. 694.
  4. ^ "Artificial lighting of country roads, by H. Merczyng". The Surveyor and Municipal Engineer. 43. St. Bride's Press: 999. 1913.
  5. ^ a b Maliszewski, Edward (1916). Polskość i Polacy na Litwie i Rusi (in Polish) (2nd ed.). PTKraj. pp. 13–14.
  6. ^ Eberhardt, Piotr (2010). "Osiągnięcia naukowe polskiej geografii narodowości". Czasopismo Geograficzne (Geographical Journal) (in Polish). 81 (3). PTG: 141. ISSN 0071-8076.
  7. ^ Zatko, James T. "The Catholic Church and the Russian Statistics 1804 - 1917". The Polish Review. 5 (1). University of Illinois Press: 39. ISSN 0032-2970.
  8. ^ Zuzga 1987, p. 699.
  9. ^ Török, Zsolt (2007). "Renaissance Cartography in East-Central Europe, ca. 1450–1650". In Woodward, David (ed.). The history of cartography. Cartography in the European Renaissance. University of Chicago Press. p. 1808.
  10. ^ Średniawa, Bronisław (1987). "The reception of theory of relativity in Poland". In Glick, Thomas F. (ed.). The Comparative Reception of Relativity. D. Reidel Publishing Company. p. 322. ISBN 978-94-010-8223-5.