A. Thurairajah

Professor
A. Thurairajah
அ. துரைராசா
2nd Vice-Chancellor of the University of Jaffna
In office
September 1988  April 1994
Preceded by S. Vithiananthan
Succeeded by K. Kunaratnam
Personal details
Born (1934-11-10)10 November 1934
Kamparmalai, Ceylon
Died 11 June 1994(1994-06-11) (aged 59)
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Alma mater Udupiddy AMC
Hartley College
University of Ceylon
University of Cambridge
Profession Academic
Ethnicity Sri Lankan Tamil

Alagiah Thurairajah (Tamil: அழகையா துரைராசா Aḻakaiyā Turairācā; 10 November 1934 – 11 June 1994) was a leading Sri Lankan Tamil academic and vice-chancellor of the University of Jaffna.

Early life and family

Thurairajah was born on 10 November 1934 in Kamparmalai in northern Ceylon.[1][2] He was the son of Velupillai Alagiah and Sellammah from Imaiyanan in Vadamarachchi.[1] He was educated at the Udupiddy American Mission College and Hartley College.[1][2] After school he joined the University of Ceylon in July 1953, graduating with BSc degree in civil engineering in 1957.[1][2]

Thurairajah then served as an instructor in civil engineering at the university until March 1958 before working for the Public Works Department as a Junior Assistant Engineer for four months.[2] He then went to the University of Cambridge on a scholarship after Kenneth H. Roscoe chose him to be his research student.[2] Between October 1958 and December 1961 Thurairajah assisted Roscoe in his research into shear properties of soils.[1][2] This research earned Thurairajah a PhD in June 1962 with thesis titled Some shear properties of kaolin and of sand.[1][2]

Thurairajah married Rajeswari.[1] They had three daughters and two sons.[1][2]

Career

After Cambridge Thurairajah worked in London for a company called Terreasearch Ltd for a while in 1962 before returning to Ceylon.[1][2] He joined the University of Ceylon as a lecturer.[1][2] He was visiting assistant professor at the University of Waterloo before becoming Professor of Civil Engineering in 1971 at the University of Ceylon.[1][2] He was Dean of the Faculty of Engineering at the Peradeniya Campus of the University of Sri Lanka from May 1975 to September 1977, and February 1982 to February 1985.[1][2][3] He was visiting professor at the University of British Columbia between October 1977 and December 1978.[1][2] He was Dean of the Faculty of Engineering at the Open University of Sri Lanka from April 1987 to August 1988.[1][2]

Thurairajah became vice-chancellor of the University of Jaffna in September 1988.[1][2][4] He resigned in March 1994 due to medical reasons.[1][2]

Thurairajah moved to Colombo for treatment and re-joined the Open University.[1] He died on 11 June 1994 in Colombo due to cardiovascular failure brought about by leukaemia.[1][2] He was posthumously awarded the Maamanithar (Great Man) honour by the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.[5]

Thurairajah was a fellow of the National Academy of Sciences (Sri Lanka) from 1977; Institution of Civil Engineers (Sri Lanka) from 1979; and the Institution of Civil Engineers (UK) from May 1985.[1][2] He was president of the National Academy of Sciences (Sri Lanka) in 1986.[1] He was president of the Institution of Civil Engineers (Sri Lanka) between October 1989 to October 1990.[2]

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.