Christoph Rudolff

Christoff Rudolff (born 1499 in Jawor, Silesia, died 1545 in Vienna) was the author of the first German textbook on algebra.

Rudolff was from 1517 to 1521 a student of Henricus Grammateus (Schreyber from Erfurt) at the University of Vienna and was the author of a book computing, under the title: Behend und hübsch Rechnung durch die kunstreichen regeln Algebre.

He introduced the radical symbol (√) for the square root. It is believed that this was because it resembled a lowercase "r" (for "radix"),[1][2] though there is no direct evidence.[3] Cajori only says that a "dot is the embryo of our present symbol for the square root"[4] though it is "possible, perhaps probable" that Rudolff's later symbols are not dots but 'r's.[5]

Furthermore, he used the meaningful definition that x0 = 1.

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