Alexander of Villedieu
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alexander of Villedieu'[1] was a French author and a mathematician. He was born around 1175 in Villedieu-les-Poêles in Normandy and died in 1240.
He was a Franciscan and writer of educational works, including the Doctrinale puerorum, a versified grammar which became a standard text, and the Carmen de Algorismo, on arithmetic, which was also widely used.[2] He was a Master of the University of Paris.[3]
[edit] Reference
- Dietrich Reichling editor (1893), Das Doctrinale des Alexander de Villa-Dei. Reprint 1974.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Alexander Villedieu, Alexander de Villedieu, Alexandre de Villedieu, Alexander de Villa Dei, Alexandre de Dol, Alexander Dolensis.
- ^ The Doctrinale was in leonine verse, the Carmen in dactylic hexameters.[1]
- ^ [2]
[edit] External links
- Franaut entry
- Alexander de Villa Dei - Mathematics and the Liberal Arts
- Image of 1463 printed edition of the Doctrinale
- (French) Bibliographical page
- (French) Musicological page