'' (1738) Daniel Bernoulli was born in
Groningen, in the Netherlands, into a
family of distinguished mathematicians. The Bernoulli family came originally from Antwerp, at that time in the
Spanish Netherlands, but emigrated to escape the Spanish persecution of the
Protestants. After a brief period in Frankfurt the family moved to Basel, in Switzerland. Daniel was the son of
Johann Bernoulli (one of the early developers of
calculus) and a nephew of
Jacob Bernoulli (an early researcher in
probability theory and the discoverer of the mathematical constant
e). He is said to have had a bad relationship with his father. Both of them entered and tied for first place in a scientific contest at the
University of Paris. Johann banned Daniel from his house, allegedly being unable to bear the "shame" of Daniel being considered his equal. Johann allegedly plagiarized key ideas from Daniel's book
Hydrodynamica in his book
Hydraulica and backdated them to before
Hydrodynamica. Daniel's attempts at reconciliation with his father were unsuccessful. When he was in school, Johann encouraged Daniel to study business citing poor financial compensation for mathematicians. Daniel initially refused but later relented and studied both business and
medicine at his father's behest under the condition that his father would teach him mathematics privately. He went to
St. Petersburg in 1724 as professor of mathematics, but was very unhappy there. A temporary illness and disagreements over his salary gave him an excuse for leaving St. Petersburg in 1733. He returned to the
University of Basel, where he successively held the chairs of
medicine,
metaphysics, and
natural philosophy until his death. In May 1750 he was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society. ==Mathematical work==