It is a great satisfaction for a mathematician to witness the growth and
expansion of a theory in which he has taken some part during its early
years. When H. Weyl coined the words "classical groups", foremost in his
mind were their connections with invariant theory, which his famous book
helped to revive. Although his approach in that book was deliberately
algebraic, his interest in these groups directly derived from his
pioneering study of the special case in which the scalars are real or
complex numbers, where for the first time he injected Topology into Lie
theory. But ever since the definition of Lie groups, the analogy between
simple classical groups over finite fields and simple classical groups
over IR or C had been observed, even if the concept of "simplicity" was
not quite the same in both cases. With the discovery of the exceptional
simple complex Lie algebras by Killing and E. Cartan, it was natural to
look for corresponding groups over finite fields, and already around
1900 this was done by Dickson for the exceptional Lie algebras G and E -
However, a deep reason for this 2 6 parallelism was missing, and it is
only Chevalley who, in 1955 and 1961, discovered that to each complex
simple Lie algebra corresponds, by a uniform process, a group scheme (fj
over the ring Z of integers, from which, for any field K, could be
derived a group (fj(K).