SCHEUBEL, Johannes. Algebrae compendiosa facilisque descriptio, qua depromuntur magna arithmetices miracula.
Paris, Guillaume Cavellat, 1551
Small 4to. 210 x 150 mm. Ancient cardboard binding.52 leaves including title-page. Printer’s device on title-page. Illustrated woodcut initials, mathematics diagrams in the text, italic and round type. Ancient handwritten note on lower margin of title-page “Domus Professae Venetae Societ.(at)is Jesu”. Slight traces of wear, very nice uncut specimen.
Very rare first edition. Important work on mathematics: contains the first appearance of the + and - symbols in France. On leaf 6 the diagram with the table of powers.
Kolpas: “Scheubel’s Algebrae Compendiosa is an algebra that does not fully use modern notation. According to Florian Cajori …, the book contains the first appearance of the + and – symbols in France […] According to Cajori, mathematical encyclopaedist and textbook author Charles Hutton (1737-1823) felt that Algebrae Compendiosa was “most beautifully printed, and is a very clear though succinct treatise; and both in the form and matter much resembles a modern printed book [..] The table of powers above appears in Algebrae Compendiosa at page (or folio) 6 recto (or 6r).”
Smith, Rara Arithmetic: “While Scheubel is not much appreciated to-day, he was really ahead of his time. He tried to banish the expression 'rule of three' and to substitute 'rule of proportion.' His explanation of square root is in some respects the best of the century, and he dismisses with mere mention the 'duplatio' and 'meditatio' of his contemporaries. He extracts various roots as far as the 24th, finding the binomial coefficients by means of the Pascal triangle a century before Pascal made the device famous.”
Smith, History of Mathematics: “He gave the so-called Pascal Triangle a century before Pascal wrote upon it, and extracted roots as high as the 24th by a process similar to the one which employs the Binomial Theorem.”
Johannes Scheubel was born in 1594 in Kirchheim unter Teck, Germany, and died in 1570 in Tübingen. Scheubel attended the Latin School in Kirchheim unter Teck, and continued his studies at the University of the Liberal Arts in Vienna. He began teaching in 1532 in Leipzig, and was appointed professor at the University of Tübingen, where he became "Magister" in 1540. According to Day, he became "Docent of Mathematics" in 1544, teaching arithmetic and geometry.
Adams , S-656; Smith, History of Mathematics I, 329 - Rara Arithmetica, pp. 235-236; Cajori, Florian. A History of Mathematical Notations. The Open Court Publishing Company, La Salle, Illinois, 1928. See especially pages 147-151.
See Sidney J. Kolpas, Mathematical Treasure: Johannes Scheubel's 1551 Algebra, in MMA online: https://old.maa.org/press/periodicals/convergence/mathematical-treasure-johannes-scheubels-1551-algebra