Gratis Versand ab € 16,99. Mehr Infos.
Bookbot

The Archimedes Codex

How a Medieval Prayer Book Is Revealing the True Genius of Antiquity's Greatest Scientist

Mehr zum Buch

At a Christie's auction in October 1998, a battered medieval manuscript sold for two million dollars to an anonymous bidder, who then turned it over to the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore for further study. The manuscript was a palimpsest-a book made from an earlier codex whose script had been scraped off and the pages used again. Behind the script of the thirteenth-century monk's prayer book, the palimpsest revealed the faint writing of a much older, tenth-century manuscript. Part archaeological detective story, part science, and part history, <i>The Archimedes Codex</i> tells the extraordinary story of this lost manuscript, from its tenth-century creation in Constantinople to the auction block at Christie's, and how a team of scholars used the latest imaging technology to reveal and decipher the original text. What they found was the earliest surviving manuscript by Archimedes (287 b.c.-212 b.c.), the greatest mathematician of antiquity-a manuscript that revealed, for the first time, the full range of his mathematical genius, which was two thousand years ahead of modern science.

Buchkauf

The Archimedes Codex, Reviel Netz, William Noel

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2007
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Hardcover),
Buchzustand
Gebraucht - Sehr gut
Preis
€ 11,49

Lieferung

  • Gratis Versand ab 16,99 € in ganz Österreich! Mehr Infos.

Zahlungsmethoden

Keiner hat bisher bewertet.Abgeben

Titel
The Archimedes Codex
Untertitel
How a Medieval Prayer Book Is Revealing the True Genius of Antiquity's Greatest Scientist
Sprache
Englisch
Erscheinungsdatum
2007
Einband
Hardcover
Seitenzahl
352
ISBN10
030681580X
ISBN13
9780306815805
Reihe
Beschreibung
At a Christie's auction in October 1998, a battered medieval manuscript sold for two million dollars to an anonymous bidder, who then turned it over to the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore for further study. The manuscript was a palimpsest-a book made from an earlier codex whose script had been scraped off and the pages used again. Behind the script of the thirteenth-century monk's prayer book, the palimpsest revealed the faint writing of a much older, tenth-century manuscript. Part archaeological detective story, part science, and part history, <i>The Archimedes Codex</i> tells the extraordinary story of this lost manuscript, from its tenth-century creation in Constantinople to the auction block at Christie's, and how a team of scholars used the latest imaging technology to reveal and decipher the original text. What they found was the earliest surviving manuscript by Archimedes (287 b.c.-212 b.c.), the greatest mathematician of antiquity-a manuscript that revealed, for the first time, the full range of his mathematical genius, which was two thousand years ahead of modern science.