Page:A History of Mathematics (1893).djvu/24

 

 THE BABYLONIANS.

fertile valley of the Euphrates and Tigris was one of the primeval seats of human society. Authentic history of the peoples inhabiting this region begins only with the foundation, in Chaldæa and Babylonia, of a united kingdom out of the previously disunited tribes. Much light has been thrown on their history by the discovery of the art of reading the cuneiform or wedge-shaped system of writing.

In the study of Babylonian mathematics we begin with the notation of numbers. A vertical wedge stood for 1, while the characters  and  signified 10 and 100 respectively. Grotefend believes the character for 10 originally to have been the picture of two hands, as held in prayer, the palms being pressed together, the fingers close to each other, but the thumbs thrust out. In the Babylonian notation two principles were employed—the additive and multiplicative. Numbers below 100 were expressed by symbols whose respective values had to be added. Thus, stood for 2,  for 3,  for 4,  for 23,  for 30. Here the symbols of higher order appear always to the left of those of lower order. In writing the hundreds, on the other hand, a smaller symbol was placed to the left of the 100, and was, in that case, to be multiplied by 100. Thus, signified  5