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Mathematical Treasure: Gaspar Lax’s Arithmetica speculativa and Proportiones

Author(s): 
Frank J. Swetz (The Pennsylvania State University)

Gaspar Lax (1487–1560) was a Spanish mathematician and theologian. Most of his adult life was spent in Paris, where he studied and taught at theological colleges within the Sorbonne. Lax wrote several books on mathematics that recapped the work of previous scholars. For instance, his Arithmetica speculativa of 1515 was based on the work of Boethius. See the Index to Mathematical Treasures for several copies of Boethius’ arithmetic.

Title page of Gaspar Lax’s 1515 Arithmetica speculativa.

Book I of this text-heavy volume began with a list of the properties of numbers.

First page of Book I of Gaspar Lax's 1515 Arithmetica speculativa.

Lax also published a slim book on proportions in 1515.

Title page of Proportiones magistri Gasparis lax aragonensis de sarinyena (1515).

Page 1 of Proportiones magistri Gasparis lax aragonensis de sarinyena (1511).

Full digitizations of the copies of Arithmetica speculativa and Proportiones owned by the National Central Library of Rome are available in the Internet Archive.

Index to Mathematical Treasures

Frank J. Swetz (The Pennsylvania State University), "Mathematical Treasure: Gaspar Lax’s Arithmetica speculativa and Proportiones," Convergence (January 2024)