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History of the Hindu–Arabic numeral system

The Hindu–Arabic numeral system is a decimal place-value numeral system that uses a zero glyph as in "205".[1]

Its glyphs are descended from the Indian Brahmi numerals. The full system emerged by the 8th to 9th centuries, and is first described outside India in Al-Khwarizmi's On the Calculation with Hindu Numerals (ca. 825), and second Al-Kindi's four-volume work On the Use of the Indian Numerals (ca. 830).[2] Today the name Hindu–Arabic numerals is usually used.

Decimal system

Historians trace modern numerals in most languages to the Brahmi numerals, which were in use around the middle of the 3rd century BC.[3] The place value system, however, developed later. The Brahmi numerals have been found in inscriptions in caves and on coins in regions near Pune, Maharashtra[2] and Uttar Pradesh in India. These numerals (with slight variations) were in use up to the 4th century.[3]

During the Gupta period (early 4th century to the late 6th century), the Gupta numerals developed from the Brahmi numerals and were spread over large areas by the Gupta empire as they conquered territory.[3] Beginning around 7th century, the Gupta numerals developed into the Nagari numerals.

Development in India

During the Vedic period (1500–500 BCE), motivated by geometric construction of the fire altars and astronomy, the use of a numerical system and of basic mathematical operations developed in northern India.[4][5] Hindu cosmology required the mastery of very large numbers such as the kalpa (the lifetime of the universe) said to be 4,320,000,000 years and the "orbit of the heaven" said to be 18,712,069,200,000,000 yojanas.[6] Numbers were expressed using a "named place-value notation", using names for the powers of 10, like dasa, shatha, sahasra, ayuta, niyuta, prayuta, arbuda, nyarbuda, samudra, madhya, anta, parardha etc., the last of these being the name for a trillion (1012).[7] For example, the number 26,432 was expressed as "2 ayuta, 6 sahasra, 4 shatha, 3 dasa, 2."[8] In the Buddhist text Lalitavistara, the Buddha is said to have narrated a scheme of numbers up to 1053.[9][10]

 
The first Brahmi numerals, ancestors of Hindu-Arabic numerals, used by Ashoka in his Edicts of Ashoka circa 250 BCE.

The form of numerals in Ashoka's inscriptions in the Brahmi script (middle of the third century BCE) involved separate signs for the numbers 1 to 9, 10 to 90, 100 and 1000. A multiple of 100 or 1000 was represented by a modification (or "enciphering"[11]) of the sign for the number using the sign for the multiplier number.[12] Such enciphered numerals directly represented the named place-value numerals used verbally. They continued to be used in inscriptions until the end of the 9th century.

In his seminal text of 499 CE, Aryabhata devised a novel positional number system, using Sanskrit consonants for small numbers and vowels for powers of 10. Using the system, numbers up to a billion could be expressed using short phrases, e. g., khyu-ghṛ representing the number 4,320,000. The system did not catch on because it produced quite unpronounceable phrases, but it might have driven home the principle of positional number system (called dasa-gunottara, exponents of 10) to later mathematicians.[13] A more elegant katapayadi scheme was devised in later centuries representing a place-value system including zero.[14]

Place-value numerals without zero

 
Bakhshali manuscript, detail of the dot "zero".

While the numerals in texts and inscriptions used a named place-value notation, a more efficient notation might have been employed in calculations, possibly from the 1st century CE. Computations were carried out on clay tablets covered with a thin layer of sand, giving rise to the term dhuli-karana ('sand-work') for higher computation. Karl Menninger believes that, in such computations, they must have dispensed with the enciphered numerals and written down just sequences of digits to represent the numbers. A zero would have been represented as a "missing place", such as a dot.[15] The single manuscript with worked examples available to us, the Bakhshali manuscript (of unclear date), uses a place value system with a dot to denote the zero. The dot was called the shunya-sthāna 'empty-place'. The same symbol was also used in algebraic expressions for the unknown (as in the canonical x in modern algebra).[16]

Textual references to a place-value system are seen from the 5th century CE onward. The Buddhist philosopher Vasubandhu in the 5th century says "when [the same] clay counting-piece is in the place of units, it is denoted as one, when in hundreds, one hundred." A commentary on Patanjali's Yoga Sutras from the 5th century reads, "Just as a line in the hundreds place [means] a hundred, in the tens place ten, and one in the ones place, so one and the same woman is called mother, daughter and sister."[17]

A system called bhūta-sankhya ('object numbers' or 'concrete numbers') was employed for representing numerals in Sanskrit verses, by using a concept representing a digit to stand for the digit itself. The Jain text entitled the Lokavibhaga, dated 458 CE,[18] mentions the objectified numeral

"panchabhyah khalu shunyebhyah param dve sapta chambaram ekam trini cha rupam cha"

meaning 'five voids, then two and seven, the sky, one and three and the form', i.e., the number 13107200000.[19][20] Such objectified numbers were used extensively from the 6th century onward, especially after Varāhamihira (c. 575 CE). Zero is explicitly represented in such numbers as "the void" (sunya) or the "heaven-space" (ambara akasha).[21] Correspondingly, the dot used in place of zero in written numerals was referred to as a sunya-bindu.[22]

Place-value numerals with zero

 
The numeral "zero" as it appears in two numbers (50 and 270) in an inscription in Gwalior. Dated to the 9th century.[23][24]

In 628 CE, astronomer-mathematician Brahmagupta wrote his text Brahma Sphuta Siddhanta which contained the first mathematical treatment of zero. He defined zero as the result of subtracting a number from itself, postulated negative numbers and discussed their properties under arithmetical operations. His word for zero was shunya (void), the same term previously used for the empty spot in 9-digit place-value system.[25] This provided a new perspective on the shunya-bindu as a numeral and paved the way for the eventual evolution of a zero digit. The dot continued to be used for at least 100 years afterwards, and transmitted to Southeast Asia and Arabia. Kashmir's Sharada script has retained the dot for zero until this day.

By the end of the 7th century, decimal numbers begin to appear in inscriptions in Southeast Asia as well as in India.[22] Some scholars hold that they appeared even earlier. A 6th century copper-plate grant at Mankani bearing the numeral 346 (corresponding to 594 CE) is often cited.[26] But its reliability is subject to dispute.[22][27] The first indisputable occurrence of 0 in an inscription occurs at Gwalior in 876 CE, containing a numeral "270" in a notation surprisingly similar to ours.[28] Throughout the 8th and 9th centuries, both the old Brahmi numerals and the new decimal numerals were used, sometimes appearing in the same inscriptions. In some documents, a transition is seen to occur around 866 CE.[22]

Adoption by the Arabs

Before the rise of the Caliphate, the Hindu–Arabic numeral system was already moving West and was mentioned in Syria in 662 AD by the Syriac Nestorian scholar Severus Sebokht who wrote the following:

"I will omit all discussion of the science of the Indians, …, of their subtle discoveries in astronomy, discoveries that are more ingenious than those of the Greeks and the Babylonians, and of their valuable methods of calculation which surpass description. I wish only to say that this computation is done by means of nine signs. If those who believe, because they speak Greek, that they have arrived at the limits of science, would read the Indian texts, they would be convinced, even if a little late in the day, that there are others who know something of value."[29]

According to Al-Qifti's History of Learned Men:[29]

"... a person from India presented himself before the Caliph al-Mansur in the year [776 AD] who was well versed in the siddhanta method of calculation related to the movement of the heavenly bodies, and having ways of calculating equations based on the half-chord [essentially the sine] calculated in half-degrees … This is all contained in a work … from which he claimed to have taken the half-chord calculated for one minute. Al-Mansur ordered this book to be translated into Arabic, and a work to be written, based on the translation, to give the Arabs a solid base for calculating the movements of the planets …"

The work was most likely to have been Brahmagupta's Brāhmasphuṭasiddhānta (The Opening of the Universe) which was written in 628.[29][30] Irrespective of whether this is wrong, since all Indian texts after Aryabhata's Aryabhatiya used the Indian number system, certainly from this time the Arabs had a translation of a text written in the Indian number system.[29]

In his text The Arithmetic of Al-Uqlîdisî (Dordrecht: D. Reidel, 1978), A.S. Saidan's studies were unable to answer in full how the numerals reached the Arab world:

"It seems plausible that it drifted gradually, probably before the 7th century, through two channels, one starting from Sind, undergoing Persian filtration and spreading in what is now known as the Middle East, and the other starting from the coasts of the Indian Ocean and extending to the southern coasts of the Mediterranean."

Al-Uqlidisi developed a notation to represent decimal fractions.[31][32] The numerals came to fame due to their use in the pivotal work of the Persian mathematician Al-Khwarizmi, whose book On the Calculation with Hindu Numerals was written about 825, and the Arab mathematician Al-Kindi, who wrote four volumes (see [2]) "On the Use of the Indian Numerals" (Ketab fi Isti'mal al-'Adad al-Hindi) about 830. They, amongst other works, contributed to the diffusion of the Indian system of numeration in the Middle East and the West.

Development of symbols

The development of the numerals in early Europe is shown below:

"Histoire de la Mathematique" by the French scholar J.E. Montucla, published in 1757
 
Table of apices
 
Table of numerals

The abacus versus the Hindu–Arabic numeral system in early modern pictures

Adoption in Europe

 
The first Arabic numerals in Europe appeared in the Codex Vigilanus in the year 976.
 
Medieval Arabic Numbers at World map from Ptolemy, Cosmographia. Ulm: Lienhart Holle, 1482
 
Libro Intitulado Arithmetica Practica, 1549
  • 976. The first Arabic numerals in Europe appeared in the Codex Vigilanus in the year 976.
  • 1202. Fibonacci, an Italian mathematician who had studied in Béjaïa (Bougie), Algeria, promoted the Arabic numeral system in Europe with his book Liber Abaci, which was published in 1202.
  • 1482. The system did not come into wide use in Europe, however, until the invention of printing. (See, for example, the 1482 Ptolemaeus map of the world printed by Lienhart Holle in Ulm, and other examples in the Gutenberg Museum in Mainz, Germany.)
  • 1512. The numbers appear in their modern form on the titlepage of the “Conpusicion de la arte de la arismetica y juntamente de geometría" written by Juan de Ortega.[33]
  • 1549. These are correct format and sequence of the "modern numbers" in titlepage of the Libro Intitulado Arithmetica Practica by Juan de Yciar, the Basque calligrapher and mathematician, Zaragoza 1549.

In the last few centuries, the European variety of Arabic numbers was spread around the world and gradually became the most commonly used numeral system in the world.

Even in many countries in languages which have their own numeral systems, the European Arabic numerals are widely used in commerce and mathematics.

Impact on arithmetic

The significance of the development of the positional number system is described by the French mathematician Pierre-Simon Laplace (1749–1827) who wrote:

It is India that gave us the ingenious method of expressing all numbers by the means of ten symbols, each symbol receiving a value of position, as well as an absolute value; a profound and important idea which appears so simple to us now that we ignore its true merit, but its very simplicity, the great ease which it has lent to all computations, puts our arithmetic in the first rank of useful inventions, and we shall appreciate the grandeur of this achievement when we remember that it escaped the genius of Archimedes and Apollonius, two of the greatest minds produced by antiquity.[34]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2005-12-27. Retrieved 2005-12-13.
  2. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2007-10-26. Retrieved 2007-01-12.
  3. ^ a b c John J O'Connor and Edmund F Robertson (November 2000). "Indian numerals". MacTutor History of Mathematics archive. from the original on 2015-07-06. Retrieved 2022-07-24.
  4. ^ Smith & Karpinski 2013, pp. 12–15.
  5. ^ Plofker 2009, Ch. 2.
  6. ^ Plofker 2009, pp. 68–69.
  7. ^ Plofker 2009, p. 14.
  8. ^ Menninger 2013, p. 397.
  9. ^ Smith & Karpinski 2013, p. 15.
  10. ^ Plofker 2009, p. 57.
  11. ^ Menninger 2013, p. 395.
  12. ^ Plofker 2009, p. 44.
  13. ^ Plofker 2009, pp. 73–75.
  14. ^ Plofker 2009, pp. 75–77.
  15. ^ Menninger 2013, p. 398.
  16. ^ Sarasvati & Jyotishmati 1979, pp. 27, 66.
  17. ^ Plofker 2009, p. 46.
  18. ^ Ifrah 1998, p. 417.
  19. ^ Ifrah 1998, p. 416.
  20. ^ It has been claimed that a mid-third century CE text Yavana-jataka (on "Greek horoscopy") employed the device of bhūta-sankhyas (Plofker 2009, p. 47). But it is now considered an error of interpretation. (Mak, Bill M. (2013), "The Transmission of Greek Astral Science into India Reconsidered-Critical Remarks on the Contents and the Newly Discovered Manuscript of the Yavanajātaka", History of Science in South Asia, 1: 1–20, doi:10.18732/H2RP4T)
  21. ^ Smith & Karpinski 2013, Ch. III; Ifrah 1998, pp. 411–418; Menninger 2013, p. 398
  22. ^ a b c d Salomon, Richard (1998), Indian Epigraphy : A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and the other Indo-Aryan Languages, Oxford University Press, USA, pp. 61–63, ISBN 978-0-19-535666-3
  23. ^ Smith, David Eugene; Karpinski, Louis Charles (1911). The Hindu-Arabic numerals. Boston, London, Ginn and Company. p. 52.
  24. ^ For a modern image
  25. ^ Ifrah 1998, p. 439.
  26. ^ Plofker 2009, p. 45.
  27. ^ Shastri, Ajaya Mitra (1998), "Mankaṇi Charter of Taralasvāmin and the Antiquity of the Decimal Notation", Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, 79 (1/4): 161–170, JSTOR 41694535
  28. ^ Plofker 2009, pp. 45–46; Menninger 2013, pp. 396–397; Ifrah 1998, p. 400
  29. ^ a b c d "Arabic numerals". MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive. Retrieved 2021-05-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  30. ^ Ifrah, Georges (2000). The universal history of numbers : from prehistory to the invention of the computer. David Bellos. New York: Wiley. ISBN 0-471-37568-3. OCLC 42291138.
  31. ^ Al-Uqlidisi biography by J. J. O'Connor and E. F. Robertson
  32. ^ Earliest Uses of Symbols for Fractions by Jeff Miller
  33. ^ “Conpusicion de la arte de la arismetica y juntamente de geometría" written by Juan de Ortega
  34. ^ Kumar, Raj (2003). Essays on Ancient India. Discovery Publishing House. pp. 196–. ISBN 978-81-7141-682-0.
Sources
  • Ifrah, Georges (1998) [first published in French in 1981], The Universal History of Numbers: From Prehistory to the Invention of the Computer, Harvill, ISBN 978-1-860-46324-2
  • Menninger, Karl (2013) [first published by MIT Press in 1969], Number Words and Number Symbols: A Cultural History of Numbers, translated by Paul Broneer, Courier Corporation, ISBN 978-0-486-31977-3
  • Plofker, Kim (2009), Mathematics in India, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-12067-6
  • Sarasvati, Svami Satya Prakash; Jyotishmati, Usha (1979), (PDF), Allahabad: Dr. Ratna Kumari Svadhyaya Sansthan, archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-06-20, retrieved 2016-01-19
  • Smith, D. E.; Karpinski, L. C. (2013) [first published in Boston, 1911], The Hindu–Arabic Numerals, Dover, ISBN 978-0486155111

References

  • The Arabic numeral system by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson 2010-02-23 at the Wayback Machine
  • Filliozat, Pierre-Sylvain (2004), "Ancient Sanskrit Mathematics: An Oral Tradition and a Written Literature", in Chemla, Karine; Cohen, Robert S.; Renn, Jürgen; et al. (eds.), History of Science, History of Text (Boston Series in the Philosophy of Science), Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 254 pages, pp. 137–157, doi:10.1007/1-4020-2321-9_7, ISBN 978-1-4020-2320-0.

history, hindu, arabic, numeral, system, hindu, arabic, numeral, system, decimal, place, value, numeral, system, that, uses, zero, glyph, glyphs, descended, from, indian, brahmi, numerals, full, system, emerged, centuries, first, described, outside, india, khw. The Hindu Arabic numeral system is a decimal place value numeral system that uses a zero glyph as in 205 1 Its glyphs are descended from the Indian Brahmi numerals The full system emerged by the 8th to 9th centuries and is first described outside India in Al Khwarizmi s On the Calculation with Hindu Numerals ca 825 and second Al Kindi s four volume work On the Use of the Indian Numerals ca 830 2 Today the name Hindu Arabic numerals is usually used Contents 1 Decimal system 2 Development in India 2 1 Place value numerals without zero 2 2 Place value numerals with zero 3 Adoption by the Arabs 4 Development of symbols 5 The abacus versus the Hindu Arabic numeral system in early modern pictures 6 Adoption in Europe 7 Impact on arithmetic 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesDecimal system EditHistorians trace modern numerals in most languages to the Brahmi numerals which were in use around the middle of the 3rd century BC 3 The place value system however developed later The Brahmi numerals have been found in inscriptions in caves and on coins in regions near Pune Maharashtra 2 and Uttar Pradesh in India These numerals with slight variations were in use up to the 4th century 3 During the Gupta period early 4th century to the late 6th century the Gupta numerals developed from the Brahmi numerals and were spread over large areas by the Gupta empire as they conquered territory 3 Beginning around 7th century the Gupta numerals developed into the Nagari numerals Development in India EditFurther information Positional notation During the Vedic period 1500 500 BCE motivated by geometric construction of the fire altars and astronomy the use of a numerical system and of basic mathematical operations developed in northern India 4 5 Hindu cosmology required the mastery of very large numbers such as the kalpa the lifetime of the universe said to be 4 320 000 000 years and the orbit of the heaven said to be 18 712 069 200 000 000 yojanas 6 Numbers were expressed using a named place value notation using names for the powers of 10 like dasa shatha sahasra ayuta niyuta prayuta arbuda nyarbuda samudra madhya anta parardha etc the last of these being the name for a trillion 1012 7 For example the number 26 432 was expressed as 2 ayuta 6 sahasra 4 shatha 3 dasa 2 8 In the Buddhist text Lalitavistara the Buddha is said to have narrated a scheme of numbers up to 1053 9 10 The first Brahmi numerals ancestors of Hindu Arabic numerals used by Ashoka in his Edicts of Ashoka circa 250 BCE The form of numerals in Ashoka s inscriptions in the Brahmi script middle of the third century BCE involved separate signs for the numbers 1 to 9 10 to 90 100 and 1000 A multiple of 100 or 1000 was represented by a modification or enciphering 11 of the sign for the number using the sign for the multiplier number 12 Such enciphered numerals directly represented the named place value numerals used verbally They continued to be used in inscriptions until the end of the 9th century In his seminal text of 499 CE Aryabhata devised a novel positional number system using Sanskrit consonants for small numbers and vowels for powers of 10 Using the system numbers up to a billion could be expressed using short phrases e g khyu ghṛ representing the number 4 320 000 The system did not catch on because it produced quite unpronounceable phrases but it might have driven home the principle of positional number system called dasa gunottara exponents of 10 to later mathematicians 13 A more elegant katapayadi scheme was devised in later centuries representing a place value system including zero 14 Place value numerals without zero Edit Bakhshali manuscript detail of the dot zero While the numerals in texts and inscriptions used a named place value notation a more efficient notation might have been employed in calculations possibly from the 1st century CE Computations were carried out on clay tablets covered with a thin layer of sand giving rise to the term dhuli karana sand work for higher computation Karl Menninger believes that in such computations they must have dispensed with the enciphered numerals and written down just sequences of digits to represent the numbers A zero would have been represented as a missing place such as a dot 15 The single manuscript with worked examples available to us the Bakhshali manuscript of unclear date uses a place value system with a dot to denote the zero The dot was called the shunya sthana empty place The same symbol was also used in algebraic expressions for the unknown as in the canonical x in modern algebra 16 Textual references to a place value system are seen from the 5th century CE onward The Buddhist philosopher Vasubandhu in the 5th century says when the same clay counting piece is in the place of units it is denoted as one when in hundreds one hundred A commentary on Patanjali s Yoga Sutras from the 5th century reads Just as a line in the hundreds place means a hundred in the tens place ten and one in the ones place so one and the same woman is called mother daughter and sister 17 A system called bhuta sankhya object numbers or concrete numbers was employed for representing numerals in Sanskrit verses by using a concept representing a digit to stand for the digit itself The Jain text entitled the Lokavibhaga dated 458 CE 18 mentions the objectified numeral panchabhyah khalu shunyebhyah param dve sapta chambaram ekam trini cha rupam cha meaning five voids then two and seven the sky one and three and the form i e the number 13107200000 19 20 Such objectified numbers were used extensively from the 6th century onward especially after Varahamihira c 575 CE Zero is explicitly represented in such numbers as the void sunya or the heaven space ambara akasha 21 Correspondingly the dot used in place of zero in written numerals was referred to as a sunya bindu 22 Place value numerals with zero Edit The numeral zero as it appears in two numbers 50 and 270 in an inscription in Gwalior Dated to the 9th century 23 24 In 628 CE astronomer mathematician Brahmagupta wrote his text Brahma Sphuta Siddhanta which contained the first mathematical treatment of zero He defined zero as the result of subtracting a number from itself postulated negative numbers and discussed their properties under arithmetical operations His word for zero was shunya void the same term previously used for the empty spot in 9 digit place value system 25 This provided a new perspective on the shunya bindu as a numeral and paved the way for the eventual evolution of a zero digit The dot continued to be used for at least 100 years afterwards and transmitted to Southeast Asia and Arabia Kashmir s Sharada script has retained the dot for zero until this day By the end of the 7th century decimal numbers begin to appear in inscriptions in Southeast Asia as well as in India 22 Some scholars hold that they appeared even earlier A 6th century copper plate grant at Mankani bearing the numeral 346 corresponding to 594 CE is often cited 26 But its reliability is subject to dispute 22 27 The first indisputable occurrence of 0 in an inscription occurs at Gwalior in 876 CE containing a numeral 270 in a notation surprisingly similar to ours 28 Throughout the 8th and 9th centuries both the old Brahmi numerals and the new decimal numerals were used sometimes appearing in the same inscriptions In some documents a transition is seen to occur around 866 CE 22 Adoption by the Arabs EditBefore the rise of the Caliphate the Hindu Arabic numeral system was already moving West and was mentioned in Syria in 662 AD by the Syriac Nestorian scholar Severus Sebokht who wrote the following I will omit all discussion of the science of the Indians of their subtle discoveries in astronomy discoveries that are more ingenious than those of the Greeks and the Babylonians and of their valuable methods of calculation which surpass description I wish only to say that this computation is done by means of nine signs If those who believe because they speak Greek that they have arrived at the limits of science would read the Indian texts they would be convinced even if a little late in the day that there are others who know something of value 29 According to Al Qifti s History of Learned Men 29 a person from India presented himself before the Caliph al Mansur in the year 776 AD who was well versed in the siddhanta method of calculation related to the movement of the heavenly bodies and having ways of calculating equations based on the half chord essentially the sine calculated in half degrees This is all contained in a work from which he claimed to have taken the half chord calculated for one minute Al Mansur ordered this book to be translated into Arabic and a work to be written based on the translation to give the Arabs a solid base for calculating the movements of the planets The work was most likely to have been Brahmagupta s Brahmasphuṭasiddhanta The Opening of the Universe which was written in 628 29 30 Irrespective of whether this is wrong since all Indian texts after Aryabhata s Aryabhatiya used the Indian number system certainly from this time the Arabs had a translation of a text written in the Indian number system 29 In his text The Arithmetic of Al Uqlidisi Dordrecht D Reidel 1978 A S Saidan s studies were unable to answer in full how the numerals reached the Arab world It seems plausible that it drifted gradually probably before the 7th century through two channels one starting from Sind undergoing Persian filtration and spreading in what is now known as the Middle East and the other starting from the coasts of the Indian Ocean and extending to the southern coasts of the Mediterranean Al Uqlidisi developed a notation to represent decimal fractions 31 32 The numerals came to fame due to their use in the pivotal work of the Persian mathematician Al Khwarizmi whose book On the Calculation with Hindu Numerals was written about 825 and the Arab mathematician Al Kindi who wrote four volumes see 2 On the Use of the Indian Numerals Ketab fi Isti mal al Adad al Hindi about 830 They amongst other works contributed to the diffusion of the Indian system of numeration in the Middle East and the West Development of symbols EditThe development of the numerals in early Europe is shown below Histoire de la Mathematique by the French scholar J E Montucla published in 1757 Table of apices Table of numeralsThe abacus versus the Hindu Arabic numeral system in early modern pictures Edit Adoption in Europe EditMain article Arabic numerals The first Arabic numerals in Europe appeared in the Codex Vigilanus in the year 976 Medieval Arabic Numbers at World map from Ptolemy Cosmographia Ulm Lienhart Holle 1482 Libro Intitulado Arithmetica Practica 1549 976 The first Arabic numerals in Europe appeared in the Codex Vigilanus in the year 976 1202 Fibonacci an Italian mathematician who had studied in Bejaia Bougie Algeria promoted the Arabic numeral system in Europe with his book Liber Abaci which was published in 1202 1482 The system did not come into wide use in Europe however until the invention of printing See for example the 1482 Ptolemaeus map of the world printed by Lienhart Holle in Ulm and other examples in the Gutenberg Museum in Mainz Germany 1512 The numbers appear in their modern form on the titlepage of the Conpusicion de la arte de la arismetica y juntamente de geometria written by Juan de Ortega 33 1549 These are correct format and sequence of the modern numbers in titlepage of the Libro Intitulado Arithmetica Practica by Juan de Yciar the Basque calligrapher and mathematician Zaragoza 1549 In the last few centuries the European variety of Arabic numbers was spread around the world and gradually became the most commonly used numeral system in the world Even in many countries in languages which have their own numeral systems the European Arabic numerals are widely used in commerce and mathematics Impact on arithmetic EditThe significance of the development of the positional number system is described by the French mathematician Pierre Simon Laplace 1749 1827 who wrote It is India that gave us the ingenious method of expressing all numbers by the means of ten symbols each symbol receiving a value of position as well as an absolute value a profound and important idea which appears so simple to us now that we ignore its true merit but its very simplicity the great ease which it has lent to all computations puts our arithmetic in the first rank of useful inventions and we shall appreciate the grandeur of this achievement when we remember that it escaped the genius of Archimedes and Apollonius two of the greatest minds produced by antiquity 34 See also EditList of numeral system topics List of numeral systems Table of mathematical symbols by introduction dateNotes Edit Hindu Arabic Numerals Archived from the original on 2005 12 27 Retrieved 2005 12 13 a b Abu Yusuf Yaqub ibn Ishaq al Sabbah Al Kindi Archived from the original on 2007 10 26 Retrieved 2007 01 12 a b c John J O Connor and Edmund F Robertson November 2000 Indian numerals MacTutor History of Mathematics archive Archived from the original on 2015 07 06 Retrieved 2022 07 24 Smith amp Karpinski 2013 pp 12 15 Plofker 2009 Ch 2 Plofker 2009 pp 68 69 Plofker 2009 p 14 Menninger 2013 p 397 Smith amp Karpinski 2013 p 15 Plofker 2009 p 57 Menninger 2013 p 395 Plofker 2009 p 44 Plofker 2009 pp 73 75 Plofker 2009 pp 75 77 Menninger 2013 p 398 Sarasvati amp Jyotishmati 1979 pp 27 66 Plofker 2009 p 46 Ifrah 1998 p 417 Ifrah 1998 p 416 It has been claimed that a mid third century CE text Yavana jataka on Greek horoscopy employed the device of bhuta sankhyas Plofker 2009 p 47 But it is now considered an error of interpretation Mak Bill M 2013 The Transmission of Greek Astral Science into India Reconsidered Critical Remarks on the Contents and the Newly Discovered Manuscript of the Yavanajataka History of Science in South Asia 1 1 20 doi 10 18732 H2RP4T Smith amp Karpinski 2013 Ch III Ifrah 1998 pp 411 418 Menninger 2013 p 398 a b c d Salomon Richard 1998 Indian Epigraphy A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit Prakrit and the other Indo Aryan Languages Oxford University Press USA pp 61 63 ISBN 978 0 19 535666 3 Smith David Eugene Karpinski Louis Charles 1911 The Hindu Arabic numerals Boston London Ginn and Company p 52 For a modern image Ifrah 1998 p 439 Plofker 2009 p 45 Shastri Ajaya Mitra 1998 Mankaṇi Charter of Taralasvamin and the Antiquity of the Decimal Notation Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 79 1 4 161 170 JSTOR 41694535 Plofker 2009 pp 45 46 Menninger 2013 pp 396 397 Ifrah 1998 p 400 a b c d Arabic numerals MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive Retrieved 2021 05 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Ifrah Georges 2000 The universal history of numbers from prehistory to the invention of the computer David Bellos New York Wiley ISBN 0 471 37568 3 OCLC 42291138 Al Uqlidisi biography by J J O Connor and E F Robertson Earliest Uses of Symbols for Fractions by Jeff Miller Conpusicion de la arte de la arismetica y juntamente de geometria written by Juan de Ortega Kumar Raj 2003 Essays on Ancient India Discovery Publishing House pp 196 ISBN 978 81 7141 682 0 SourcesIfrah Georges 1998 first published in French in 1981 The Universal History of Numbers From Prehistory to the Invention of the Computer Harvill ISBN 978 1 860 46324 2 Menninger Karl 2013 first published by MIT Press in 1969 Number Words and Number Symbols A Cultural History of Numbers translated by Paul Broneer Courier Corporation ISBN 978 0 486 31977 3 Plofker Kim 2009 Mathematics in India Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 12067 6 Sarasvati Svami Satya Prakash Jyotishmati Usha 1979 The Bakhshali Manuscript An Ancient Treatise of Indian Arithmetic PDF Allahabad Dr Ratna Kumari Svadhyaya Sansthan archived from the original PDF on 2014 06 20 retrieved 2016 01 19 Smith D E Karpinski L C 2013 first published in Boston 1911 The Hindu Arabic Numerals Dover ISBN 978 0486155111References Edit The Development of Hindu Arabic and Traditional Chinese Arithmetic by Professor Lam Lay Yong member of the International Academy of the History of Science Indian numerals by J J O Connor and E F Robertson Arabic numerals by J J O Connor and E F Robertson Hindu Arabic numerals The Arabic numeral system by J J O Connor and E F Robertson Archived 2010 02 23 at the Wayback Machine Filliozat Pierre Sylvain 2004 Ancient Sanskrit Mathematics An Oral Tradition and a Written Literature in Chemla Karine Cohen Robert S Renn Jurgen et al eds History of Science History of Text Boston Series in the Philosophy of Science Dordrecht Springer Netherlands 254 pages pp 137 157 doi 10 1007 1 4020 2321 9 7 ISBN 978 1 4020 2320 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the Hindu Arabic numeral system amp oldid 1117269790, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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