1. Aleksei Nikolaevich Parshin was a Russian mathematician, specializing in arithmetic geometry.

1. Aleksei Nikolaevich Parshin was a Russian mathematician, specializing in arithmetic geometry.
Aleksei Parshin is most well-known for his role in the proof of the Mordell conjecture.
Aleksei Parshin then enrolled as a graduate student at the Steklov Institute of Mathematics, where he received his Kand.
Aleksei Parshin became a junior research fellow at the Steklov Institute of Mathematics in Moscow in 1968, later becoming a senior and leading research fellow.
Aleksei Parshin became the head of its Department of Algebra in 1995.
Aleksei Parshin was an editor for the Russian edition of the collected works of David Hilbert and was a co-editor, with V I Arnold, of selected works of Hermann Weyl.
Aleksei Parshin was born on 7 November 1942 in Sverdlovsk and died on 18 June 2022.
Aleksei Parshin was Orthodox Christian and wrote about the relationship between Russian religious philosophy and the modern sciences.
In 1971, Aleksei Parshin received the Prize of the Moscow Mathematical Society for young mathematicians.
Aleksei Parshin received the Vinogradov Prize in 2004 and the Chebyshev Gold Medal in 2012 from the Russian Academy of Sciences.
Aleksei Parshin was elected a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences in 2006 and then a full member in 2011.
Aleksei Parshin was elected a member of the Academia Europaea in 2017.
Aleksei Parshin was an invited speaker at the 1970 International Congress of Mathematicians with his talk titled Quelques conjectures de finitude en geometrie diophantienne.
Aleksei Parshin was a plenary speaker at the 2010 ICM with his talk titled Representations of higher adelic groups and arithmetic.