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[Conics] Conicorum Libri Quattuor. Una Cum Pappi Alexandrini Lemmatibus, et Commentariis Eutochii Ascalonitae
[Conics] Conicorum Libri Quattuor. Una Cum Pappi Alexandrini Lemmatibus, et Commentariis Eutochii Ascalonitae

APOLLONIUS OF PERGA

[Conics] Conicorum Libri Quattuor. Una Cum Pappi Alexandrini Lemmatibus, et Commentariis Eutochii Ascalonitae

Bologna: Alessandro Benacci, 1556

FIRST EDITION of the first four books of Apollonius's Conics; the first printing of any of his work. "Of the school of Euclid in Alexandria, Apollonius applied to conic sections the discipline that Euclid had given to geometry" (Dibner 101).

Apollonius was “known by his contemporaries as ‘the Great Geometer,’ whose treatise Conics is one of the greatest scientific works from the ancient world. Most of his other treatises are now lost, although their titles and a general indication of their contents were passed on by later writers, especially Pappus of Alexandria (fl. c. AD 320). Apollonius's work inspired much of the advancement of geometry in the Islamic world in medieval times, and the rediscovery of his Conics in Renaissance Europe formed a good part of the mathematical basis for the scientific revolution.

“The first four books of the Conics survive in the original Greek, the next three only from a 9th-century Arabic translation, and an eighth book is now lost. Books I–IV contain a systematic account of the essential principles of conics and introduce the terms ellipse, parabola, and hyperbola, by which they became known" (Britannica).

Beautifully printed with diagrams on nearly every page. Bound with: SERENUS OF ANZI (fl. 4th century). Libri duo. Unus de sectione cylindri, alter de sectione coni. All texts translated from Greek into Latin and edited by Federico Commandino (1509-1575). 

Bologna: Alessandro Benacci, 1566. Bologna: Alessandro Benacci, 1566, Folio, early full vellum with silk ties, old tape repair to top of spine, some soiling to binding, ties frayed, evidence of signature removal at top of title, bookplate of Franz Joseph, Count of Kuenberg. Text exceptionally clean with wide margins. 

$14,000

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