Giants built this ground.
We're not letting it go cold.
Georgia produced mathematicians who rewrote the rules of physics, engineering, and space exploration. Their work is in every satellite, every aircraft fuselage, every load-bearing structure on earth. This is the tradition we come from. And we intend to honor it.

1889 – 1929
Andria Razmadze
The Founder
Andria Razmadze
Calculus of Variations
What he did
Created a new direction in calculus of variations by solving problems in the class of discontinuous curves. Before him, this entire field dealt with smooth curves — he showed how to handle cases where curves have breaks and corners.
Why it matters
Built Georgian mathematical terminology from zero. Every math term written in Georgian traces back to his work. He didn't just do mathematics in Georgia — he made Georgia mathematical.

1891 – 1976
Niko Muskhelishvili
The Engineer of Theory
Niko Muskhelishvili
Elasticity & Integral Equations
What he did
Invented methods for solving elasticity problems using complex variable functions. Before him, calculating stress and deformation in solid materials was extremely difficult. His methods made it solvable — and they're still used today in engineering, construction, and aerospace.
Why it matters
His techniques were directly applied in building the USSR's first satellite. He also developed the theory of singular integral equations, giving mathematicians a powerful new toolkit that remains standard worldwide.

1907 – 1977
Ilia Vekua
The Inventor
Ilia Vekua
Generalized Analytic Functions & Shell Theory
What he did
Created the theory of generalized analytic functions — a completely new branch of mathematics that didn't exist before him. He also invented new methods for solving elliptic partial differential equations.
Why it matters
Built a mathematical theory of thin elastic shells — curved structures like domes, aircraft fuselages, and rocket bodies. Before his work, engineers couldn't precisely calculate how these structures behave under stress. His math is in every aircraft flying today.
The challenge
These men solved problems the world said were unsolvable.
They didn't ask permission. They just did it.
Razmadze created an entire mathematical language for a nation. Muskhelishvili's equations helped put the first satellite in orbit. Vekua's math is in every aircraft fuselage flying right now.
This is the standard we hold ourselves to. Not because we have to. Because we refuse to let this legacy collect dust.
Challenge us.
Bring us your broken systems, your duct-taped workflows, your impossible deadlines. We come from a country that produced mathematicians who solved what couldn't be solved. Give us something worth solving.
30-minute call · No pitch deck · No bullshit