Stevin

Simon Stevin


Born: 1548 in Bruges, Flanders (now Belgium)
Died: 1620 in The Hague, Holland



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Simon Stevin was a Dutch mathematician and engineer who founded the science of hydrostatics by showing that the pressure exerted by a liquid upon a given surface depends on the height of the liquid and the area of the surface.

Stevin was a bookkeeper in Antwerp, then a clerk in the tax office at Brugge. After this he moved to Leiden where he first attended the Latin school, then he entered the University of Leiden in 1583 (at the age of 35).

While quartermaster in the Dutch army, Stevin invented a way of flooding the lowlands in the path of an invading army by opening selected sluices in dikes. He was an outstanding engineer who built windmills, locks and ports. He advised the Prince Maurice of Nassau on building fortifications for the war against Spain.

The author of 11 books, Stevin made significant contributions to trigonometry, geography, fortification, and navigation. In Wereldschrift he defended the sun centred system of Copernicus. Inspired by Archimedes, Stevin wrote important works on mechanics.

In his book De Beghinselen der Weeghconst in 1586 appears the theorem of the triangle of forces giving impetus to statics. In 1585 he published De Thiende in which he presented an elementary and thorough account of decimal fractions.

Although he did not invent decimals (they had been used by the Arabs and the Chinese long before Stevin's time) he did introduce their use in mathematics. His notation was to be taken up by Clavius and Napier. Stevin states that the universal introduction of decimal coinage, measures and weights would only be a matter of time.

Stevin's notion of a real number was accepted by essentially all later scientists. Particularly important was Stevin's acceptance of negative numbers but he did not accept the 'new' imaginary numbers and this was to hold back their acceptance.

Stevin, in his book Stelreghel meaning Algebra, used the notation +, - and sqrt.

In 1586 (3 years before Galileo) he reported that different weights fell a given distance in the same time.

Texto original por: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson


List of References (16 books/articles)

A Quotation

A Poster of Simon Stevin

Mathematicians born in the same country

Some pages from publications

A page from the preface of La Disme (1634) a French translation of De Thiende .

Cross-references to History Topics

An overview of the history of mathematics

Other references in MacTutor

Chronology: 1500 to 1600

Honours awarded to Simon Stevin
(Click a link below for the full list of mathematicians honoured in this way)
Lunar features Crater Stevinus
Other Web sites
  1. Hopfam
  2. The Galileo Project
  3. Amsterdam, Netherlands (An English translation of La Theinde)

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JOC/EFR December 1996 School of Mathematics and Statistics
University of St Andrews, Scotland
The URL of this page is:
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Stevin.htm