Page:The Algebra of Mohammed Ben Musa (1831).djvu/5



the study of history, the attention of the observer is drawn by a peculiar charm towards those epochs, at which nations, after having secured their independence externally, strive to obtain an inward guarantee for their power, by acquiring eminence as great in science and in every art of peace as they have already attained in the field of war. Such an epoch was, in the history of the Arabs, that of the Caliphs al-Mansur, Harun al-Rashid, and al-Ma'mun, the illustrious contemporaries of Charlemagne; to the glory of which era, in the volume now offered to the public, a new monument is endeavoured to be raised.

Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi, of Khowarezm, who it appears, from his preface, wrote this Treatise at the command of the Caliph, was for a long time considered as the original inventor of Algebra. “Hæc ars olim a Arabis filio, initium sumsit: etenim hujus rei locupes testis -