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Mathematics in ancient MesopotamiaDate: 2015-10-07; view: 538. Read and translate the introduction at sight: meagre – недостаточный; небольшой, скудный orientalist - ориенталист, востоковед durability - долговечность lawgiver - законодатель advance - успех, прогресс, достижение Until the 1920s it was commonly supposed that mathematics had its birth among the ancient Greeks. What was known of earlier traditions, such as the Egyptian as represented by the Rhind's Papyrus (itself edited for the first time only in 1877), offered at best a meagre precedent. This impression gave way to a very different view as Orientalists succeeded in deciphering and interpreting the technical materials from ancient Mesopotamia. Owing to the durability of the Mesopotamian scribes' clay tablets, the surviving evidence of this culture is substantial. Existing specimens of mathematics represent all the major eras—the Sumerian kingdoms of the 3rd millennium BC, the Akkadian and Babylonian regimes (2nd millennium), and the empires of the Assyrians (early 1st millennium), Persians (6th through 4th centuries BC), and Greeks (3rd century BC to 1st century AD). The level of competence was already high as early as the Old Babylonian dynasty, the time of the lawgiver king Hammurabi (c. 18th century BC), but after that there were few notable advances. The application of mathematics to astronomy, however, flourished during the Persian and Seleucid (Greek) periods.
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