Born in
Paris to
Alsatian Jewish parents who fled the annexation of
Alsace-Lorraine to
Germany, he studied in Paris,
Rome and
Göttingen and received his
doctorate in 1928. He spent two academic years at
Aligarh Muslim University from 1930.
Sanskrit literature was a life-long interest of his. He had a one-year position in
Marseilles, and then spent six years in
Strasbourg. He married Eveline in 1937.
Weil was in
Finland when
World War II broke out; he had been travelling in Scandinavia since April 1939. Eveline returned to France, but he did not. A famous anecdote appears in his
autobiography: after having been arrested under suspicion of
espionage in Finland, when the USSR attacked on
30 November 1939, he was saved from being shot only by the intervention of
Rolf Nevanlinna. This is the version
that Nevanlinna propagated after the war. However, such a story is a bit too good to be true. In 1992, the Finnish mathematician
Osmo Pekonen went to the archives to check the facts. Based on the documents, he established that Weil was not really going to be shot, even if he was under arrest, and that Nevanlinna probably didn't do - and didn't need to do - anything to save him. Pekonen published a paper on this with an afterword by André Weil himself. Nevanlinna's motivation for concocting such a story of himself as the rescuer of a famous Jewish mathematician probably was the fact that he had been a Nazi sympathizer during the war. The story also appears in Nevanlinna's autobiography, published in Finnish, but the dates don't match with real events at all. It is true, however, that Nevanlinna housed Weil in the summer of 1939 at his summer residence Korkee at
Lohja in Finland - and offered
Hitler's Mein Kampf as bedside reading. Weil signed '
Bourbaki' in Nevanlinna's guestbook.
Weil returned to France via Sweden and the United Kingdom, and was detained at
Le Havre in January 1940. He was charged with failure to report for duty, and was imprisoned in Le Havre and then
Rouen. It was there in the military prison in Bonne-Nouvelle, a district of Rouen, from February to May, that he did the work that made his reputation. He was sent to trial on
May 3 1940. Sentenced to five years, he asked to be sent to a military unit instead, and joined a regiment in
Cherbourg. After the
fall of France, he met up with his family in Marseilles, where he arrived by sea. He then went to
Clermont-Ferrand, where he managed to join Eveline, who had been in the German-occupied region. In January 1941 they left by sea from Marseilles, and sailed to New York.
During the war, Weil went to the United States where he was supported by the
Rockefeller Foundation and
Guggenheim Foundation. He was at the
Universidade de São Paulo for two years from 1945, where he spent much time with
Oscar Zariski. He taught at the
University of Chicago from 1947 to 1958 before settling at the
Institute for Advanced Study in
Princeton.