04287ctm a22005534a 4500
15335267
20211101164912.0
cr |||||||||||
080618s1911 xx 000 0 ara
7
cbc
orignew
2
ncip
19
y-nonroman
acquire
1 shelf copies
policy default
yh84 2008-06-17
yh59 2008-07-08
yh59 2008-09-02 to AMED
2008401687
DLC
DLC
n-us-dc
QA32.I1183
S53 1911
(3
880-01
Sibṭ al-Māridīnī, Badr al-Dīn Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad,
1423-
100-01/(3/r
سبط المارديني, بدر الدين محمد ابن محمد.
880-02
Lumʻah al-Māridīnīyah fī sharḥ al-Yāsamīnīyah
240-02/(3/r
لمعة الماردينية في شرح الياسمينية
880-03
Taʻlīq ʻalá al-urjūzah al-Yāsamīnīyah fī ʻilm al-jabr.
245-03/(3/r
تعليق على الأرجوزة الياسمينية في علم الجبر.
3 Jumādá al-ūlá 1329 H [2 May 1911]
13 leaves (19 lines), bound :
paper ;
25 x 18 cm.
Binding: Cardboard covered with cloth, leather spine.
Fol.1a to 13a.
Library of Congress. Mansuri Collection, 5-732.
DLC
Ms.
Naskhī script; 19 lines in written area, 16 x 9 cm.
Paper: yellowed cream, in good condition; leaves loose. Black ink throughout. Catchwords on rectos.
Transcribed by Muḥammad ʻAlī Yāsīn on 3 Jumādá al-ūlá, 1329 H.
500-00/(3/r
Incipit: بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم وبه نستعين, قال الشيخ الإمام العلامة سبط المارديني ...
Text is a short treatise on arithmetic and a commentary on the versified treatise of arithmetic entitled al-Yāsamīnīyah by ʻAbd Allāh ibn Ḥajjāj ibn al-Yāsamīn.
The 12th-century mathematical poem known as al-Yāsamīnīyya fī 'ilm al-Jabr (The poem by al-Yāsamīn on calculus) from the name of its author, al-Yāsamīn, is one of the most read and commented upon mathematical texts of its time. Its verses have been extensively copied, both in autonomous form and by incorporation into larger commentaries up to the 20th century. The present manuscript preserves an early 20th-century copy of the 15th-century commentary on the Yāsamīnīyya written by Badr al-Dīn Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad ibn al-Ġazal, best known as Sibṭ al-Māridīnī ("the son of al-Māridīnī's daughter") from the name of his famous maternal grandfather, himself a mathematician. Sibṭ al-Māridīnī, who was active as muwaqqit (timekeeper) at the Al-Azhar Mosque in Cairo during the last years of the 15th century, is very likely to have composed the text of his commentary with an educational purpose in mind. The commentary deals with the definition of the elements of algebra known at the time (number, root and sequence); the description of the six canonical equations already identified by al-Ḫwārizmī during the 9th century; and the treatment of the algebraic operations of restoration, comparison, and multiplication and division of monomials. The commentary clarifies and expands upon the content of the verses in the older poem.
World Digital Library.
Also available in digital form on the Library of Congress website.
Arabic.
Purchase of Mahmud al-Mansuri collection, 1945.
DLC
Ibn al-Yāsamīn, ʻAbd Allāh ibn Ḥajjāj,
-1204.
Yāsamīnīyah.
Manuscripts, Arabic
Washington (D.C.)
Mathematics, Arab
Early works to 1800.
Manṣūrī, Maḥmūd al-Imām,
former owner.
Yāsīn, Muḥammad ʻAlī,
scribe.
Ibn al-Yāsamīn, ʻAbd Allāh ibn Ḥajjāj,
-1204.
Yāsamīnīyah.
Mansuri Collection (Library of Congress)
DLC
amedscd
2008401687
https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.amed/amedscd.2008401687
amed/amedscd
pmpull
scd
wdl