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| Adam Ries | |
Adam Ries in his 58th year of age, his only contemporary portrait
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| Born | 1492 Staffelstein |
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| Died | March 30, 1559 Annaberg |
| Nationality | German |
| Fields | Mathematics |
Adam Ries (1492 – March 30, 1559) was a German mathematician. He is sometimes better known by the name of Adam Riese; scientists and historians, however, point out that the correct spelling of his name is Ries.
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Life
Almost nothing is known about Ries' childhood, youth and education. It is not even possible to determine the year of his birth with certainty. The caption on the only known contemporary portrait of the mathematician reads: ANNO 1550 ADAM RIES SEINS ALTERS IM LVIII. Therefore he was in his 58th year of age at the time of the picture, which was made in 1550. From this it can be concluded that he was born in 1492, although if he did not turn 58 till the end of 1550, he could also have been born in 1493.
The location of his birth, Staffelstein, can be determined with certainty, since he gives information about himself in the preface to his book, "Coß". His father was the owner of the mill there, Contz Ries, and his mother, Eva Kittler, was his father's second wife.
The first decades after Ries' birth are not documented, so it is not known which schools he attended. There is also no information about the studies of the later mathematician in the matriculation registers of the universities which existed at that time.
The first time at all that Adam Ries was mentioned in a document was on April 22, 1517, when he appeared before the Council of Staffelstein because of a dispute over an inheritance. Already in 1509, he stayed with his younger brother, Conrad, in Zwickau, who attended the Latin school there. In 1518, Ries went to Erfurt, where he led a mathematics school, and he wrote two of his mathematics books and had them published there.
In 1522 or 1523, he moved to the still new mining city of Annaberg, where he spent the rest of his life. There he ended work on the manuscript of his algebra textbook, "Coß", in 1524, although the book was not published until 1992 by B.G. Teubner. During this time, Ries got acquainted with Anna Leuber, the daughter of the Freiberg master fitter, Andreas Leuber. The wedding of the couple was mentioned in the register of the St. Annen Church in Annaberg in 1525. In the same year, he took the oath of citizenship, purchased a house in Johannisgasse in Annaberg and thus settled down. He first earned his living as a Rezessschreiber (a person who checked the calculations of the mines), and later as a Gegenschreiber (a bookkeeper of the mines) and Zehntner (regional financial administrator). In 1539, he bought "Riesenburg", a minor fortification outside of the city, whose buildings still bear his name today. After his last work appeared in print in 1550, Ries died on March 30, 1559. Because of scanty information, it is not known where he is buried, whether in Annaberg, the Riesenburg or elsewhere.
Family
Ries and his wife had at least eight children. Three of the five sons, Adam, Abraham, and Jacob, were all active as mathematicians in Annaberg at times. While Abraham and Jacob died in their home town in 1604, Adam is supposed to have settled in the Harz mountains. The fourth son, Isaac, moved to Leipzig, where he was active as a Visierer (a master of weights and measures). Paul, the fifth son, was a landowner and judge in Wiesa. The three daughters, Eva, Anna and Sybilla, all married in Annaberg.
Adam Ries' descendants are a subject of constant, detailed genealogical research. Great numbers of his descendants still live in the upper Erzgebirge today. The Adam-Ries-Bund (Adam Ries Association, see external links) has taken on the task of researching all of the descendants of Adam Ries and has more than 20,000 direct descendants in its continually updated data bank until now.
Works
- Rechnung auff der linihen (1518): In it, Ries describes calculating on the lines of a calculating board, a kind of abacus. According to the foreword, the second edition was expressly intended for children.
- Rechenung auff der linihen und federn... (1522): Besides calculating on the calculating board, he describes numerical calculations with Indian/Arabic digits. The intended readers were the apprentices of businessmen and craftsmen. Until now, it has been published 114 times.
- Coß (manuscript 1524, printed in 1992): The algebra textbook has the commonly used names for the variables and unknowns in the Middle Ages, and it establishes the connection between medieval and modern algebra.
- Ein Gerechent Büchlein/ auff den Schöffel/ Eimer/ vnd Pfundtgewicht... (manuscript 1533, printed in 1536): A book with tables for calculating everyday prices; a kind of guide which, according to Ries' foreword, helps "that the poor common man not be cheated when buying bread." Also known by the name of "Annaberger Brotordnung."
- Rechenung nach der lenge/ auff den Linihen vnd Feder. (1550): Often cited under the shortened title, "Practica". The book also shows a portrait of the author for the first time, which is the only contemporary picture of Ries at all, and also gives an indication of the year of his birth.
It is worth noting that Adam Ries did not write his works in Latin, as was usual at that time, but in German. Through that, he reached a larger readership and was also able, like Martin Luther, to contribute to a unification of the German language.
Adam Ries is generally considered to be the "father of modern calculating" and he decisively contributed to the recognition that Roman numerals are unwieldy in practice and to their replacement by the considerably more structured Arabic numerals to a large extent.
Name
In today's usage, both variants of his name, "Ries" and "Riese" can be found. The latter is a grammatical relic from the time of the mathematician, where the names of people were also declined, so the name "Ries" had the ending "-e" added when used in the German expression "nach Adam Riese", which is still used today. This expression means "according to Adam Ries" and it is used when speaking about simple arithmetic, e.g. zwei und zwei macht, nach Adam Riese, vier (two plus two is, according to Adam Riese, four). The "-e" added to his name is commonly not recognized as a declension ending today, however.
Since the spelling of names was not as fixed at that time as it is today, the spellings "Ris, "Rise", "Ryse" and even "Reyeß" are also sometimes found.
Monuments
Annaberg
- 1893: Bust by Robert Henze
On the occasion of the 400th birthday of Adam Ries, the Annaberg Historical Society decided in 1891 to put up a monument to the mathematician. The sculpture by the Dresden sculptor, Henze, was not dedicated until November 5, 1893 because of financial difficulties. In 1943, the bronze bust was melted to make armaments and it was replaced ten years later by a sandstone copy. At the end of the 1970s, this was completely removed from the city because of fears that its condition would continue to deteriorate due to the material. In 1991, a new sandstone bust was exhibited in its current position. After severe damage by vandalism in 1992, it was once again reconstructed through the initiative of the Adam Ries Association, and it was once again placed before the church on the 100th anniversary of the first dedication.
Staffelstein
- 1874: Plaque at the City Hall
- 1959: Sandstone relief by Karl Potzler at the City Hall
- 1980: Bronze relief by Hubert Weber at the savings bank branch on Bamberger Straße
- 1990: Bronze relief by Huber Weber in front of the savings bank branch on Bahnhofstraße
- 1992: Bronze plaque at the entrance to the Raiffeisenbank, the presumed location of the house where Adam Ries was born
Erfurt
- 1992: Three-part ensemble, with bronze bust, text plaque and calculating table set into the surface of the road on Michaelisstraße 48
Postage Stamps
- The German Post Office issued two postage stamps in honor of Adam Ries in 1959 and 1992 (Michel catalog no. 308 and 1612).
References
This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.
Literature
- Hans Burkhardt: Annaberger Adam-Ries-Büchlein. Projekte Verlag Halle, 2003, ISBN 3-931950-93-X (in German)
- Rainer Gebhardt (Hrsg.): Die Annaberger Brotordnung von Adam Ries. Adam-Ries-Bund, 2004, ISBN 3-930430-66-5 (in German)
- Georg Gehler und Wolfgang Lorenz: Das Neue Adam-Ries-Nachfahrenbuch. Adam-Ries-Bund, 1997, ISBN 3-930430-06-1 (in German)
- Joachim Mehnert: "Wahre Geschichten um Adam Ries", Tauchaer Verlag 2003,[1] ISBN 3-89772-066-3 (in German)
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Adam Ries |
- O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Adam Ries", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive
- http://www.adam-ries-bund.de
- http://www.adam-ries.de
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 1 October 2008, at 12:51.
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