Sudhakara Dvivedi
Sudhakara Dvivedi (1855-1910) was an Indian scholar in Sanskrit and mathematics.
Biography
Sudhakara Dvivedi was born in 1855 in Khajuri, a village near Varanasi. In childhood he studied mathematics under Pandit Devakrsna.
In 1883 he was appointed a librarian in the Government Sanskrit College, Varanasi where in 1898 he was appointed the teacher of mathematics and astronomy after Bapudeva Sastri retired in 1889.[1]
He was the head of mathematics department in Queen's college Benaras from where he retired in 1905 and mathematician Ganesh Prasad became the new head of department.[2] Dvivedi wrote a number of translations, commentaries and treatises, including one on algebra which included topics such as Pellian equations, squares, and Diophantine equations.[3]
Works in Sanskrit
- Chalan Kalan
- Deergha Vritta Lakshan ("Characteristics of Ellipse")
- Goleeya Rekha Ganit ("Sphere Line Mathematics")
- Samikaran Meemansa ("Analysis of Equations")
- Yajusha Jyauti-sham and Archa Jyauti-sham
- Ganakatarangini (1892)[4]
- Euclid's Elements 6th, 11th and 12th parts
- Lilavati (1879)
- Bijaganita (1889)
- Pañcasiddhāntikā of Varāhamihira (1889): Co-edited with George Thibaut[5]
- Surya Siddhanta
- Brahmagupta’s Brāhmasphuṭasiddhānta, 1902, ("Brahmagupta's Brāhmasphuṭasiddhānta" (PDF). 1902. Retrieved 25 August 2015.)
- Aryabhata II's Maha-Siddhanta (1910)
Works in Hindi
- Differential Calculus (1886)[4]
- Integral Calculus (1895)[4]
- Theory of equations (1897)[4]
- A History of Hindu mathematics I (1910)
References
- ^ Joseph W. Dauben; Christoph J. Scriba (23 September 2002). Writing the History of Mathematics: Its Historical Development. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 312–313. ISBN 978-3-7643-6167-9.
- ^ Prasad, Ganesh. Some great mathematicians of the nineteenth century. Krishna Prakashan Media. p. xi.
- ^ Patwardhan, K.S.; Naimpally, A.S.; Singh, Shyamlal (2001). Līlāvatī of Bhāskarācārya: a treatise of mathematics of Vedic tradition : with rationale in terms of modern mathematics largely based on N.H. Phadke's Marāthī translation of Līlāvatī. Motilal Banarsidass. p. xx. ISBN 978-81-208-1420-2. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
- ^ a b c d Hoiberg, Dale (2000). Students' Britannica India:Select essays. India: Popular Prakashan. p. 333. ISBN 9780852297629.
- ^ "Metric Measures, Volumes 7-8". 1964. University of California. 1964. p. 12. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
External links
- Yajusha Jyauti-sham
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Ancient | |
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Classical |
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Modern |
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- Aryabhatiya
- Bakhshali manuscript
- Bijaganita
- Brāhmasphuṭasiddhānta
- Ganita Kaumudi
- Kanakkusaram
- Karanapaddhati
- Līlāvatī
- Lokavibhaga
- Pātīgaṇita
- Paulisa Siddhanta
- Paitamaha Siddhanta
- Romaka Siddhanta
- Sadratnamala
- Siddhānta Shiromani
- Śulba Sūtras
- Surya Siddhanta
- Tantrasamgraha
- Vasishtha Siddhanta
- Veṇvāroha
- Yuktibhāṣā
- Yavanajataka
innovations
mathematics
- Bapudeva Sastri (1821–1900)
- Shankar Balakrishna Dikshit (1853–1898)
- Sudhakara Dvivedi (1855–1910)
- M. Rangacarya (1861–1916)
- P. C. Sengupta (1876–1962)
- B. B. Datta (1888–1958)
- T. Hayashi
- A. A. Krishnaswamy Ayyangar (1892– 1953)
- A. N. Singh (1901–1954)
- C. T. Rajagopal (1903–1978)
- T. A. Saraswati Amma (1918–2000)
- S. N. Sen (1918–1992)
- K. S. Shukla (1918–2007)
- K. V. Sarma (1919–2005)
institutions
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