History knows several prominent personalities who bore the name Mark Levin. Their activities and actions have contributed to the development of history, science and medicine. This article will look at some of the most interesting facts from the biography of Mark Levin - a military leader, doctor and mathematician.
Warlord
Mark Valery Levin was a Roman commander. He was elected praetor in 215 BC. e. During these years, the commander commanded the troops defending the coast of the Calabrian Sea, and prevented the attempts of Philip V to help Hannibal. For the next five years, the activities of the Roman commander were aimed at preventing the Macedonians from interfering in the affairs of the Roman Empire.
In 210 B. C. e. Mark Valery Levin returns to Rome as consul. He was supposed to stand at the head of Italy and wage war against Hannibal, but this event did not happen. As a result, Levin was instructed to take the lead in Sicily, where he was engaged in the revival of agriculture, and also commanded the fleet. Under his leadership, the Carthaginian fleet in northern Africa was defeated. Twoyears later, the great commander completely defeated the Carthaginian fleet.
Doctor and scientist
This man was born on July 24, 1898. Levin Mark Mironovich began his medical and scientific activity at the Medical Institute of Kyiv in 1925. At first, Levin worked as a doctor in a rural hospital. In 1937 he defended his scientific dissertation and received the title of candidate of medical sciences. Three years later, Mark Mironovich becomes an assistant professor at a medical institute in Kyiv.
In 1942, Mark Levin defended his doctoral dissertation on the study of endotoxin secreted by gonococcus. Mark Mironovich was active in scientific work at the Orenburg and Smolensk medical institutes. His merits in medicine did not go unrewarded. Mark Levin was awarded the title of Honorary Professor of the Smolensk Medical Academy.
Mathematician
Mark Iosifovich Levin was born in Moscow in 1945. His scientific activity dates back to 1995. The scientist has a large number of scientific degrees in mathematics, economics and technical sciences. He is a Doctor of Economics and a PhD in Engineering.
An outstanding mathematician has lectured and taught courses at the Sorbonne and at the University of Haifa in Israel. Currently, Mark Levin teaches at the Higher School of Economics and is the head of the Department of Microeconomic Analysis.