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Alexander of Villedieu
French mathematician

Alexander of Villedieu

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Intro
French mathematician
Places
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Villedieu-les-Poêles, canton of Villedieu-les-Poêles, arrondissement of Saint-Lô, Manche
Age
65 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Alexander of Villedieu was a French author, teacher and poet, who wrote text books on Latin grammar and arithmetic, everything in verse. He was born around 1175 in Villedieu-les-Poêles in Normandy, studied in Paris, and later taught at Dol in Brittany. His greatest fame stems from his versified Latin grammar book, the Doctrinale Puerorum. He died in 1240, or perhaps in 1250. He was a Franciscan and a Master of the University of Paris.

His Doctrinale puerorum, a versified grammar, soon became a classic. It was composed around 1200, and was all written in leonine hexameters. Even after several centuries, with the advent of printing, it appeared in countless editions in Italy, Germany and France. It was based on the older works of Donatus and Priscian.

Alexander also wrote a short tract on arithmetic called Carmen de Algorismothe Poem about Arithmetic, which also reached a wide distribution. A typical line from his Carmen de Algorismo, runs like this:

Extrahe radicem semper sub parte sinistra

Wherein he instructs his students: "always extract the square root by starting from the left". The poem is not very long, only a few hundred lines, and summarizes the art of calculating with the new style of Indian dice, or Talibus Indorum, as he calls the new Hindu-Arabic numerals.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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