Marie-Louise Jacotin was born on 7 July 1905. She was the daughter of a lawyer for a French bank, and the grand-daughter (through her mother) of a glassblower from a family of Greek origin. Her mathematics teacher at the lycée was a sister of mathematician
Élie Cartan, and after passing the baccalaureate she was allowed (through the intervention of a friend's father, the head of the institution) to continue studying mathematics at the
Collège de Chaptal. On her second attempt, she placed second in the entrance examination for the
École Normale Supérieure in 1926 (tied with
Claude Chevalley), but by a ministerial decree was moved down to 21st position. After the intervention of Fernand Hauser, the editor of the Journal of the ENS, she was admitted to the school. Her teachers there included
Henri Lebesgue and
Jacques Hadamard, and she finished her studies in 1929. With the encouragement of ENS director
Ernest Vessiot she traveled to
Oslo to work with
Vilhelm Bjerknes, under whose influence she became interested in the mathematics of waves and the work of
Tullio Levi-Civita in this subject. She returned to Paris in 1930, married another mathematician,
Paul Dubreil, and joined him on another tour of the mathematics centers of Germany and Italy, including a visit with Levi-Civita. The Dubreils returned to France again in 1931. ==Career and research==