Immanuel Bonfils
{{Short description|Israeli mathematician and astronomer}}
Immanuel ben Jacob Bonfils (c. 1300 – 1377) was a French-Jewish mathematician and astronomer in medieval times who flourished from 1340 to 1377, a rabbi who was a pioneer of exponential calculus and is credited with inventing the system of decimal fractions.Vucinich, Alexander (1963). Science in Russian Culture, A History to 1860. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press He taught astronomy and mathematics in Orange and later lived in Tarascon, both towns in the Holy Roman Empire that are now part of modern-day France.{{cite web |url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/3530-bonfils-immanuel-ben-jacob |title=Bonfils, Emmanuel Ben Jacob|work=JewishEncyclopedia.com|accessdate=2015-02-20}} Bonfils studied the works of Gersonides (Levi ben Gershom), the father of modern trigonometry{{citation needed|date=July 2015}}, and Al-Battani and even taught at the academy founded by Gersonides in Orange.Dimont, Max I. (2004). Jews, God, and History. Signet ClassicsShatzmiller, Joseph (2013). Cultural Exchange; Jews, Christians, and Art in the Medieval Marketplace. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press
Bonfils preceded any attempt at a European decimal system by 150 years,Blech, Benjamin (2004). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Jewish History and Culture. Indianapolis, IN: Alpha Books publishing the treatise Method of Division by Rabbi Immanuel and Other Topics ({{langx|he|דרך חילוק}}) on the general theory of decimal fractions around 1350. This was a forerunner to Simon Stevin, the first to widely distribute publications on this topic, and employed decimal notation for integers, fractions, and both positive and negative exponents.Suzuki, Jeff (2009). Mathematics in Historical Context. Washington, DC: The Mathematical Association of AmericaBen-Menahem, Ari (2009). Historical Encyclopedia of Natural and Mathematical Sciences. Springer Verlag
While living in Tarascon in 1365, Bonfils published the work for which he would become best known, Sepher Shesh Kenaphayim (Book of Six Wings) ({{langx|he|שש כנפים}}), a manuscript on eclipses that featured astronomical tables predicting future solar and lunar positions (divided into six parts).{{cite journal |title=The Six Wings of Immanuel Bonfils and Michael Chrysokokkes|first=Peter|last=Solon|doi=10.1111/j.1600-0498.1971.tb00147.x|volume=15|journal=Centaurus|pages=1–20|bibcode=1971Cent...15....1S|year = 1971}} The book included data for every important date on the Jewish calendar and even correction factors necessary for those who lived as far away as Constantinople. Breaking the tables into six parts was an allusion to the six wings of the seraphim as mentioned in the Bible in Isaiah 6:2, earning Bonfils the nickname master of the wings.
For 300 years, Bonfils' calculations which were extensively used by sailors and explorers well into the 17th century. The book was translated from Hebrew into Latin in 1406 by Johannes Lucae e Camerino and into Greek in 1435 by Michael Chrysokokkes. The book inspired Chemist George Sarton to publish his own version of Six Wings nearly 600 years later. Bonfils translated a number of books from Latin to Hebrew. He also wrote a treatise on the relationship between the diameter and circumference of a circle and methods of calculating square roots.
Works
- Bonfils, Immanuel (1365), The Wings of Eagles, {{langx|he|שש כנפים}}, in six books. Other name: Book of Six Wings, {{langx|he|שש כנפים}}. The main astronomical work of Bonfils.
- Bonfils, Immanuel (c. 1350), The Invention of the Decimal Fractions and the Application of the Exponential Calculus by Immanuel Bonfils of TarasconRagep, F. Jamil and Sally P. Ragep (1996). Tradition, Transmission, Transformation. Netherlands: Brill Academic Pub
- Bonfils, Immanuel (c. 1350), Method of Division by Rabbi Immanuel and Other Topics, {{langx|he|דרך חילוק}}, a course of decimal arithmetics, including decimal fractions.
References
{{Reflist}}
- Gandz, S.: "The invention of the decimal fractions and the application of the exponential calculus by Immanuel Bonfils of Tarascon (c. 1350)", Isis 25 (1936), 16–45.
- P. Solon: The Six Wings of J. Bonfils and Michael Chrysokokkes, in: Centaurus, 15 (1970) 1–20
External links
- [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/3530-bonfils-immanuel-ben-jacob BONFILS, IMMANUEL BEN JACOB] in Jewish Encyclopedia.
- [http://sceti.library.upenn.edu/sceti/ljs/PageLevel/view.cfm?option=view&ManID=ljs204 Six Wings.]
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Category:14th-century French mathematicians
Category:14th-century astronomers
Category:Medieval Jewish astronomers
Category:Medieval French astronomers
Category:14th-century French writers