DIOPHANTUS OF ALEXANDRIA (fl. 250 A.D.). Arithmeticorum libri sex, Paris: Hieronymus Drouart, 1621, 2° (326 x 208mm.), EDITIO PRINCEPS IN GREEK, with Latin translation by Claude Gaspar Bachet, title printed in red and black with device of thistles within baroque frame, woodcut diagrams (small repaired hole to blank area of title which is possibly washed, a2 repaired at corner, upper outer margin of a few leaves browned, occasional dust-soiling), early 19th-century half calf (recased, covers scuffed). [Brunet II, 731; Dawson 1926; Hoffman II, 109; Sotheran I, 1062].

Details
DIOPHANTUS OF ALEXANDRIA (fl. 250 A.D.). Arithmeticorum libri sex, Paris: Hieronymus Drouart, 1621, 2° (326 x 208mm.), EDITIO PRINCEPS IN GREEK, with Latin translation by Claude Gaspar Bachet, title printed in red and black with device of thistles within baroque frame, woodcut diagrams (small repaired hole to blank area of title which is possibly washed, a2 repaired at corner, upper outer margin of a few leaves browned, occasional dust-soiling), early 19th-century half calf (recased, covers scuffed). [Brunet II, 731; Dawson 1926; Hoffman II, 109; Sotheran I, 1062].
Provenance
Bloucalte, inscription to title.

Lot Essay

The most important work of Diophantus, a Greek mathematician of the third century, containing a tract on polygonal numbers as well as the six books of the Arithmetica. Although a previous Latin edition had appeared in 1575, this edition is important for directing Fermat's attention to the theory of numbers. Another edition containing Fermat's own commentaries was published at Toulouse in 1670.

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