Babylonian Mathematics
Around 2000 B.C., a people called the Amorites invaded Sumer and captured
its cities. These people became known as the Babylonians, whose civilisation
lasted for a millennium and a half, until the capture of Babylon by the
Persians in 538 B.C. The Babylonians made some significant advances
in mathematics over previous civilisations.
The Babylonians retained much of Sumerian mathematics, and the Sumerian
number system was mostly retained. The Babylonians then did something
unique in the ancient world: They invented a positional number system.
The Babylonians dropped most of the Sumerian symbols that were used to
write numbers, and kept only two: The "wedge", which represented 1, and
the "hook", which represented ten.
The Hindu-Arabic number system that we use
today is also a positional system. In a positional (or place value)
number system, the position of the number indicates the value attached
to it. For example, the value of the "4" in 43 is 40 because it
appears in the tens place. On the other hand, the value of "4" in
34 is 4, because it is in the ones place.
Our number system is a base ten system. The Babylonians used a
base 60 system. Here is a brief overview of how they formed numbers
(which will be enhanced once I get around to doing some graphics):
1 was represented as a wedge, 2 as two wedges, ... 9 as nine wedges,
10 as a hook, 11 as a hook and a wedge, and so on up to 59 which
was represented as five hooks and nine wedges. To represent 60,
a wedge was placed in the sixties place.
This system wasn't perfect.
For example, there was no zero to use as a placeholder.
Therefore,a number like 61 (1 × 60 + 1 × 1)
would look very similar to 3601 (1 × 3600 + 1 × 1) because
in the latter number, the 60's place was left blank.
Around the time of Alexander the Great (more than 200 years after Babylon
was captured by the Persians) the Babylonians fixed this problem by using
two oblique wedges as a placeholder. Another problem was that there
was no decimal point. This would make a number such as
1/2
(30 × 1/60) look the same as 30 (30 × 1).
The representation of many numbers was often ambiguous, so scribes had to
use the numbers' context to determine their value.
Still, the invention of a positional system was a great achievement in
mathematics, Considering that millennia later the
Greeks still used cumbersome number
systems like the Attic and
Ionic numerals.
In Europe Hindu-Arabic numerals did not
catch on until about 1500 A.D., more than three
millennia after the Babylonians adopted
their place value system.
The Babylonians made other significant advances in other areas of
mathematics, such as fractions, algebra, and geometry.
I may elaborate on these shortly. Meanwhile,
there's tiny bits about them in my pages on
the Pythagorean theorem and
2.
Mathematics history
Last updated January 27, 2002.
URL: http://www.stormloader.com/ajy/babylonian.html
For questions or comments email James Yolkowski.
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