Timoleon Argyropoulos (Greek: Τιμολέων Αργυρόπουλος April 12, 1847 - January 16, 1912) was an experimental physicist, mathematician, author and professor. He was a pioneer in modern Greek education. His field of study was electricity and magnetism. He is one of the most important experimental physicists in modern Greek education. He was the father of Greek radiology. He replaced Dimitrios Stroumpos as the chair of physics at the University of Athens. Initially, the school of Physics and Mathematics was part of the School of Philosophy. Argyropoulos along with other world-renowned Greek scientists Anastassios Christomanos, Konstantinos M. Mitsopoulos, Spyridon Miliarakis, Nikolaos Apostolides, and filed a memorandum to the Greek state to separate the schools in the late 1800s. Argyropoulos