Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Scientists - Recorde Robert
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 1     1-20 of 92    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Recorde Robert:     more detail
  1. Welsh Mathematicians: Bertrand Russell, Elmer Rees, Brian Bowditch, Robert Recorde, David Williams, Thomas Jones, E. Brian Davies, Henry Owen
  2. Robert Recorde: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001
  3. The Grounde of Artes by Robert Recorde, 2009-09-28
  4. Robert Recorde's mathematical teaching and the anti-Aristotelian movement by Francis R Johnson, 1935
  5. The Castle of Knowledge by Robert Recorde, 2009-11-04
  6. The Pathway to Knowledge by Robert Recorde, 2009-10-16
  7. An Introduction by Robert Recorde, 2009-10-27
  8. The Pathway to Knowledg Containing the First Principles of Geometrie, as they may moste aptly be applied onto practise, bothe for use of instrumentes Geometricall, and astronomicall and also for proiection of plattes in ever kinde, and therefore much necessary for all sortes of men. by Robert. RECORDE, 1551
  9. The Whetstone of Witte by Robert Recorde, 2010-03-16

1. Robert Recorde Store
Robert Recorde Listing of 84 Robert Recorde items available for purchase at our online store. Click here for Robert Recorde and Robert Recorde related products. Robert Recorde Store. Buy Robert
http://www.mathbook.com/bio/r/Robert_Recorde
Award Winning Electronic Explorer Globe
by LeapFrog
At Amazon
on 4-15-2003.
More Info

This award-winning globe could help children become A+ geography students. The Explorer Globe II is jam-packed with hundreds of facts, trivia, and useful scholastic information about every aspect of the geographical world. It electronically verbalizes everything from area population, capitol city/country, state/province, large bodies of water, currencies, high points, distance, and more. Other remarkable features make the Explorer an even more useful reference tool. It has a world clock that, once set from your home area, will tell the time in every other part of the world. And any country can be selected to hear a sample its national music (yes, Tahiti does have a national anthem). The globe sits on a sturdy base, which features a dashboard full of interactive functions and an attached soft-tipped stylus. This stylus is the key instrument: use it to touch virtually any point on the surface of the globe to retrieve information. Diane Beall
Batteries: 4 C batteries required.
Visit Our Sites: Buy Law Books Top Quality Wrist Watches

2. Recorde
Robert Recorde. Born 1510 in Tenby, Wales Died 1558 in London, England. RobertRecorde s parents were Thomas Recorde and Rose Jones.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Recorde.html
Robert Recorde
Born: 1510 in Tenby, Wales
Died: 1558 in London, England
Click the picture above
to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Robert Recorde 's parents were Thomas Recorde and Rose Jones. Thomas Recorde's father was from Wales and Rose Jones was the daughter of Thomas Jones from Machynlleth in Montgomeryshire. Robert was the second son of Thomas and Rose and, although the date is not definitely known, it is thought that he entered the University of Oxford in about 1525. Again we do not know the topics he studied but we do know that he graduated with a B.A. in 1531 and was elected a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford in that year. All Souls was a graduate College at this time endowed for the study of Church music. It trained men in theology, law and medicine. Certainly we know that he studied medicine at Oxford and was a highly educated man. In later life he was interested in history, collecting British antiquities and manuscripts, and he was an expert in the Anglo-Saxon language. It is reasonable to suppose that he gained his love of antiquities at All Souls College for John Leyland, who was in 1531 chaplain and librarian to King Henry VIII employed by the King for his expertise in antiquities and manuscripts, had studies at All Souls at the same time as, or slightly before, Recorde. It is likely that following his election to a fellowship in 1531 Recorde taught at Oxford for a few years but there are no records to prove this. The next that we know for certain is that he went to Cambridge and studied there for his M.D. There is a record at Cambridge which states that Recorde received a license in medicine in Oxford twelve years earlier and this almost certainly means that Recorde received the degree of B.M. from Oxford although again no record of this has been found. He graduated from Cambridge in 1545, receiving the degree of M.D. He may have taught at Cambridge following the award of his degree but all we know for certain is that some time during two years following 1545 he moved to London where he practiced medicine.

3. Poster Of Recorde
Robert Recorde. lived from 1510 to 1558. Recorde invented the equalssymbol = which appears in his book The Whetstone of Witte (1557).
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Posters2/Recorde.html
Robert Recorde lived from 1510 to 1558 Recorde invented the equals symbol '=' which appears in his book The Whetstone of Witte Find out more at
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/
Mathematicians/Recorde.html

4. Robert Recorde / 100 Welsh Heroes / 100 Arwyr Cymru
87. Robert Recorde. Dyna ysgrifennodd Robert Recorde wrth gyflwyno r syniad o ddefnyddiodau gysylltnod, un ar ben y llall, i gyfleu cydbwysedd hafaliad.
http://www.100welshheroes.com/cy/biography/robertrecorde
87. Robert Recorde
Meddylwyr (57 o bleidleisiau) Dyfeisiwr yr hafalnod a "thad mathemateg Prydain". "Noe 2 thynges can be moare equalle". Dyna ysgrifennodd Robert Recorde wrth gyflwyno"r syniad o ddefnyddio dau gysylltnod, un ar ben y llall, i gyfleu cydbwysedd hafaliad. Er ei bod wedi cymryd cryn amser cyn i"r hafalnod gael ei ddefnyddio"n gyffredinol, go brin fod yna unrhyw ddyfais arall gan Gymro wedi cael ei ddefnyddio"n amlach. Mae"r wybodaeth am ddyddiau cynnar Recorde yn Ninbych y Pysgod yn ddigon prin - ond yn y dref honno yn Sir Benfro y cafodd ei eni i rieni y credir bod eu gwreiddiau yn lleol ac yn Sir Drefaldwyn. Mae"n rhaid ei fod yn blentyn rhyfeddol gan iddo fynd i Brifysgol Rhydychen yn 15 oed, a chael ei ethol yn Gymrawd yn All Souls chwe blynedd yn ddiweddarach. Yng nghyfnod y Tuduriaid, cafodd nifer o Gymry talentog swyddi amlwg nad oedd ar gael iddynt cyn hynny. Manteisiodd Recorde i"r eithaf ar y cyfle wrth ymgyfeillachu â"r Arglwydd Amddiffynnydd, Edward Seymour â"i penododd yn rheolwr y bathdy ym Mryste. Yn dilyn cwymp Seymour, fe gafodd Recorde ei benodi i oruchwylio mwyngloddiau"r brenin yn Iwerddon - swydd ddiddiolch a fyddai"n profi"n hunllef iddo yn y dyfodol. Roedd yn ddigon gwirion hefyd i wneud gelyn o"r Iarll Penfro pwerus - penderfyniad a fyddai"n achosi cryn drafferth iddo cyn diwedd.

5. Robert Recorde / 100 Welsh Heroes / 100 Arwyr Cymru
87. Robert Recorde. Thinkers (57 votes). What you said. Our understanding of lifeis based on Mathematics we owe more thanks to Robert Recorde than we realise.
http://www.100welshheroes.com/en/biography/robertrecorde
87. Robert Recorde
Thinkers (57 votes) Inventor of the equals sign and the “father of British mathematics”. "Noe 2 thynges can be moare equalle”, wrote Robert Recorde as he introduced the idea of placing two hyphens in parallel to symbolise the balance of an equation. His equals sign was an invention that, while slow in becoming universally adopted, is still perhaps the most fundamental thing ever invented by a person from Wales. Little is known of Recorde’s early years in Tenby, the Pembrokeshire town where he was born to parents thought to be of local and Montgomeryshire stock. Clearly something of a prodigy, he entered Oxford University at the age of 15 and was elected a Fellow of All Souls six years later. Under the Tudor monarchs, talented Welshman could attain positions of prominence previously denied to them. Recorde took his opportunities with both hands, becoming an ally of the Lord Protector Edward Seymour who made him controller of the mint at Bristol. After Seymour’s fall from power Recorde was appointed to oversee the king’s mines in Ireland, a thankless position that would return to haunt him in later years. He also foolishly made an enemy of the powerful Earl of Pembroke in another move that stored up trouble for the future.

6. Recorde
Robert Recorde. 1510 1558. Robert Recorde was born in Tenby, Wales in 1510. Unfortunately there is little known account of his childhood years. As a young adult he studied first at Oxford, then at
http://www.math.twsu.edu/history/men/recorde.html
Robert Recorde Robert Recorde was born in Tenby, Wales in 1510. Unfortunately there is little known account of his childhood years. As a young adult he studied first at Oxford, then at Cambridge where he graduated in medicine. Sometime later he served as physician to King Edward VI and Queen Mary. He then served some time in Ireland as Comptroller of Mines and Monies'. Although he began in medicine, mathematics is the area that has brought about his name in history. Recorde wrote many textbooks including; The Grounde of Artes (1540) which is one of the earliest known mathematical works published in English. In it he first used the symbols (+) and (-). It was perhaps the most important arithmetic textbook written in English in the 16th century. His other books of note include, The Castle of Knowledge (1551), an astronomical work discussing the theories of Copernicus; The Pathwaie to Knowledge (1551), considered by many as just an abridgement of Euclid's elements; and The Whetstone of Witte (1557), an algebraic book in which Recorde is credited for developing the (=) equal sign. He used two, long, parallel lines because he said, "noe 2 thynges can be moare equalle." An interesting side note is that Recorde wrote all of his books except for The Pathwaie to Knowledge in the form of a dialogue between a master and a scholar. Recorde died in the King's Bench Prison in 1558, where he was committed for debt. It is believed, although not proven, that Recorde may have also been imprisoned for serious complaints brought against him during his job as Comptroller of the Mines in Ireland in 1551-1553.

7. Recorde
Robert Recorde. 1510 1558. Robert Recorde was born in Tenby, Wales in 1510.Unfortunately there is little known account of his childhood years.
http://www.math.wichita.edu/history/men/recorde.html
Robert Recorde Robert Recorde was born in Tenby, Wales in 1510. Unfortunately there is little known account of his childhood years. As a young adult he studied first at Oxford, then at Cambridge where he graduated in medicine. Sometime later he served as physician to King Edward VI and Queen Mary. He then served some time in Ireland as Comptroller of Mines and Monies'. Although he began in medicine, mathematics is the area that has brought about his name in history. Recorde wrote many textbooks including; The Grounde of Artes (1540) which is one of the earliest known mathematical works published in English. In it he first used the symbols (+) and (-). It was perhaps the most important arithmetic textbook written in English in the 16th century. His other books of note include, The Castle of Knowledge (1551), an astronomical work discussing the theories of Copernicus; The Pathwaie to Knowledge (1551), considered by many as just an abridgement of Euclid's elements; and The Whetstone of Witte (1557), an algebraic book in which Recorde is credited for developing the (=) equal sign. He used two, long, parallel lines because he said, "noe 2 thynges can be moare equalle." An interesting side note is that Recorde wrote all of his books except for The Pathwaie to Knowledge in the form of a dialogue between a master and a scholar. Recorde died in the King's Bench Prison in 1558, where he was committed for debt. It is believed, although not proven, that Recorde may have also been imprisoned for serious complaints brought against him during his job as Comptroller of the Mines in Ireland in 1551-1553.

8. Robert Recorde
Robert Recorde (c. 15101558) Robert Recorde was one of the most eminent mathematiciansand teachers in England during the middle of the sixteenth century, who
http://math.dartmouth.edu/~matc/Readers/renaissance.astro/3.0.Recorde.html

Introduction

Nicholas Copernicus

De Revolutionibus

John Dee
...
The Mathematicall Praeface

Robert Recorde
The Castle of Knowledge

Marcellus Palingenius Stellatus

The Zodiake of Life

Thomas Digges
... Bibliography Robert Recorde (c. 1510-1558) Robert Recorde was one of the most eminent mathematicians and teachers in England during the middle of the sixteenth century, who wrote books on arithmetic, geometry, and astronomy, all in English. Castle ofKnowledge (1556), is a comprehensive textbook on astronomy, written in the form of a dialogue between the Master and his young Scholar. The book is meant to train its reader in traditional astronomy, but Recorde is already familiar with the Copernican theory, which must have become a topic of much interest to astronomers and mathematicians, as this excerpt indicates. Last updated 1 September 1999

9. Robert Recorde
Robert Recorde 1510 1558. Gellir gweld un o lyfrau r Doctor RobertRecorde yn yr Amgueddfa yn Ninbych y Pysgod. Ganed Robert Recorde
http://www.ngfl-cymru.org.uk/vtc/ngfl/eng/geography/tenby_journey/cymraeg/html/r
Robert Recorde 1510 - 1558 Gellir gweld un o lyfrau'r Doctor Robert Recorde yn yr Amgueddfa yn Ninbych y Pysgod. Ganed Robert Recorde yn Ninbych y Pysgod yn 1510, ond does fawr o neb yn gwybod llawer amdano erbyn heddiw. Roedd ei fam, Rose, yn ferch i Thomas Jones o Fachynlleth a'i dad yn fasnachwr Tuduraidd yn Ninbych y Pysgod Gadawodd Robert Sir Benfro yn 15 mlwydd oed am Rydychen. Bu'n dysgu am gyfnod cyn dod yn feddyg i Edward y Chweched a'r Frenhines Mari. Roedd e'n wr bonheddig, yn fathemategydd, yn gyfarwydd a'r iaith Roeg, yn fedrus mewn meddyginiaeth ac yn hyddysg yn y gyfraith. Gwr amryddawn iawn. Bu'n llywodraethwr y Bathdy, ac yn arolygwr mwyngloddiau arian yn Iwerddon a Lloegr. Robert Recorde oedd un o'r dynion cyntaf yn y wlad yma i dderbyn syniadau COPERNICUS am yr haul. Un o wlad Pwyl oedd Copernicus. 1473 - 1543. Dadleuai mai'r HAUL oedd canol system y bydysaw a bod y DDAEAR a'r PLANEDAU eraill yn cylchdroi o gwmpas yr haul. Cyn damcaniaeth Copernicus credai pobl fod y Ddaear yn aros yn ei hunfan a bod y planedau i gyd yn cylchdroi o'i chwmpas. Carcharwyd Copernicus am ei ddamcaniaeth. Robert Recorde luniodd arwydd cyfartaledd, yr

10. Wiskundigen - Recorde
Robert Recorde (1510 1558) was een Brits geleerde en arts, die veel van zijn vrijetijd gebruikte om leerboeken te schrijven in het Engels (en niet in het
http://www.wiskundeweb.nl/Wiskundegeschiedenis/Wiskundigen/Recorde.html
Recorde
Robert Recorde (1510 - 1558) was een Brits geleerde en arts, die veel van zijn vrije tijd gebruikte om leerboeken te schrijven in het Engels (en niet in het Latijn, de wetenschappelijke taal van die tijd) over wiskunde en astronomie. Hij beoogde een totale leergang te schrijven die voor iedereen die dat wilde toegankelijk was. Recorde was in feite de stichter van een Engelse wiskundige traditie en de eerste die de algebra introduceerde in Engeland. Ook was hij de uitvinder van het is-gelijk-teken '='. Met dat werk startte hij al voordat hij in 1545 zijn graad in de medicijnen haalde in Cambridge en naar Londen verhuisde om een artsenpraktijk op te zetten.
Links naar anderstalige sites:
De tijd van Recorde
Recorde leefde in een tijd waarin de wetenschappelijke ontwikkeling zich verplaatste naar West-Europa. De handelssteden daar hadden rekenmeesters en wiskundigen nodig, eerst vooral op het gebied van het handelsrekenen en renteberekeningen, maar al snel op breder terrein. Bovendien ontstond er een bewustzijn voor de eigen taal en cultuur. Veel klassieke werken waren alleen in het Grieks en Latijn beschikbaar en werden nu vertaald in plaatselijke talen. Recorde was zo'n schrijver van leerteksten op het gebied van de wiskunde. Henry VIII (Blauwbaard) stierf op 28 januari 1547. Zijn tienjarige zoon Edward VI (bij zijn derde vrouw Jane Seymour) volgde hem op. De hertog van Somerset, Edward Seymour, werd regent met de titel 'protector' en regeerde in feite het land namens de koning. In 1549 echter werd hij verdreven door John Dudley, de graaf van Warwick en werd sir William Herbert gouverneur van Edward VI. Recorde was in die tijd de controleur van de munt in Bristol waar het geld werd geslagen. Herbert had geld nodig voor zijn leger dat enkele opstanden (in Devon en Cornwall) tegen het regiem van Edward VI moest onderdrukken. Toen Recorde hem niet zonder rechtstreeks bevel van de koning geld wilde doorsluizen, raakten beide in conflict. Recorde werd ontslagen.

11. Ro Laren
Robert Powell Robert Priest Robert Purvis Robert R. Blake Robert R. McCammon RobertRaikes Robert Rankin Robert Rauschenberg Robert recorde robert Redford
http://www.fact-index.com/r/ro/
RO
Ro

Ro Laren

Ro Mam
RO
Ro

Ro Laren

Ro Mam
...
Rozz Williams

12. Robert Recorde
Robert Recorde. Robert Recorde (c. 1510 1558) was a Welsh physicianand mathematician. He introduced the equals sign (=). A member
http://www.sciencedaily.com/encyclopedia/robert_recorde
Match: sort by: relevance date
Free Services
Subscribe by email

RSS newsfeeds

PDA-friendly format
loc="/images/" A A A Find Jobs In: Healthcare
Engineering

Accounting College Contract / Freelance Customer Service Diversity Engineering Executive Healthcare Hospitality Human Resources Information Tech International Manufacturing Nonprofit Retail All Jobs by Job Type All Jobs by Industry
Relocating? Visit: Moving Resources
Moving Companies

Mortgage
Information
Mortgage Calculator
Real Estate Lookup Front Page Today's Digest Week in Review Email Updates ... Outdoor Living
Encyclopedia
Main Page See live article
Robert Recorde
Robert Recorde (c. ) was a Welsh physician and mathematician . He introduced the "equals" sign (=). A member of a respectable family of Tenby, Wales, he entered the University of Oxford in about 1525, and was elected a fellow of All Souls' College in . Having adopted medicine as a profession, he went to the University of Cambridge to take the degree of M.D. in 1545. He afterwards returned to Oxford, where he publicly taught mathematics, as he had done prior to going to Cambridge. It appears that he afterwards went to London , and acted as physician to King Edward VI and to Queen Mary , to whom some of his books are dedicated. He was arrested for debt and died in the King's Bench prison

13. Robert Recorde --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Encyclopædia Britannica. recorde, robert. Encyclopædia Britannica Article MLA style " robert recorde." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004. Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=64514

14. The Invention Of The Equals Sign
It was the invention of a Welshman named robert recorde, the man who first introduced algebra to England. thynges, can be moare equalle." robert recorde, The Whetstone of Witte
http://www.ualr.edu/~lasmoller/equals.html
Did you know . . .? The symbol '=' was first used only in 1557! It was the invention of a Welshman named Robert Recorde, the man who first introduced algebra to England. Recorde used the symbol, composed of two parallel lines, in his 1557 book The Whetstone of Witte to avoid having to write over and over again "is equal to." But the symbol didn't catch on right away. Some people preferred the symbol ' ,' while others used the abbreviation ae or oe (for the Latin aequalis or "equal") into the 1700s. As for Recorde himself, he died a debtor in King's Bench Prison. Robert Recorde. (Source: http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/PictDisplay/Recorde.html)
In his own words: "To avoide the tediouse repetition of these woordes: is equalle to: I will settle as I doe often in woorke use, a paire of paralleles, or gemowe [twin] lines of one lengthe: =, bicause noe .2. thynges, can be moare equalle." Robert Recorde, The Whetstone of Witte (Source: http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Recorde.html) For more information: http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Recorde.html

15. Untitled
299317. recorde, robert (ca. 1510-1558) Brewer, D New Light on robert recorde." Isis 8 (1926), 50-70
http://www.u.arizona.edu/~ctb/16qrst.html
    Rastell, John (d. 1536)
  • Laine, Amos Lee. "John Rastell and the Norman Conquest: Tudor Theories about the Feudal Age." The Rusted Hauberk: Feudal Ideas of Order and Their Decline . Ed. Liam O. Purdon and Cindy L. Vitto. Gainesville, FL, 1994. pp. 299-317. Recorde, Robert (ca. 1510-1558)
  • Brewer, D. S. "Sixteenth, Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century References to the Voyage of Ohthere." Anglia
  • Clarke, F. M. "New Light on Robert Recorde." Isis Rogers, Daniel (ca. 1538-1591)
  • Levy, F. J. "Daniel Rogers as Antiquary." Still, John (?1543-1608)
  • Van Kampen, Kimberly Lynn. Evidence of a Sixteenth-Century Anglo-Saxon Scholar: His Work and Sources . Doctoral thesis, Northern Illinois University, 1997. Talbot, Robert (ca. 1505-1558)
  • Graham, Timothy. "The Earliest Old English Word-List from Tudor England." Medieval English Studies Newsletter
  • Graham, Timothy. "Robert Talbot's 'Old Saxonice Bede.'" Cambridge Bibliographical Society Newsletter
  • Graham, Timothy. "Robert Talbot's 'Old Saxonice Bede': Cambridge University Library, MS Kk.3.18 and the 'Alphabetum Norwagicum' of British Library, Cotton MSS, Domitian A.IX." Books and Collectors 1200-1700: Essays Presented to Andrew Watson . Ed. James P. Carley and Colin G. C. Tite. London, 1997. pp. 295-316.

16. Biography-center - Letter R
.edu/art/collections/bio/a17411.html. Rauschenberg, robert. www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/ database/rauschenberg_r.html PAR_I_ID=75701. recorde, robert. www-history.mcs.st-and.ac
http://www.biography-center.com/r.html
Visit a
random biography ! Any language Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish
R
511 biographies

17. Recorde, Robert
Catalog of the Scientific Community. recorde, robert. Note the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical questions. 1. Dates. Born Tenby, Pembrokeshire
http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/Catalog/Files/recorde.html
Catalog of the Scientific Community
Recorde, Robert
Note: the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical questions.
1. Dates
Born: Tenby, Pembrokeshire, Wales, c.1510
Died: London, 1558 His will was proved on 18 June 1558.
Dateinfo: Birth Uncertain
Lifespan:
2. Father
Occupation: Unknown
The only information is the statement that Thomas Recorde came from a good family. This could mean gentry, but I don't care to guess.
No information on financial status.
3. Nationality
Birth: Welsh (British)
Career: English, Irish
Death: English
4. Education
Schooling: Oxford; Cambridge, M.D.
Oxford, 1525-31; B.A., 1531.
Cambridge, M.D., 1545.
5. Religion
Affiliation: Catholic, Protestant
He must have begun adult life as a Catholic. There is some evidence that he adopted the Protestant cause. He seems too early to use the word Anglican.
6. Scientific Disciplines
Primary: Mathematics
Subordinate: Medicine, Astronomy
Recorde was the founder of the English school of mathematics. The Ground of Artes, 1552arithmetic. The Pathway to Knowledg, 1551a translation and rearrangement of the first four books of Euclid. The Gate of Knowledge, apparently completed but never publishedmeasurement and use of the quadrant. The Castle of Knowledge, 1556 construction and use of the sphere, elementary Ptolemaic astronomy (including one brief favorable mention of Copernicus). The Whetstone of Witte, 1557elementary algebra.
As a physician he also published The Urinal of Physick, 1547, a traditional medical work.

18. Recorde
Biography of robert recorde (15101558) robert recorde. Born 1510 in Tenby, Wales Main index. robert recorde's parents were Thomas recorde and Rose Jones
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Recorde.html
Robert Recorde
Born: 1510 in Tenby, Wales
Died: 1558 in London, England
Click the picture above
to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Robert Recorde 's parents were Thomas Recorde and Rose Jones. Thomas Recorde's father was from Wales and Rose Jones was the daughter of Thomas Jones from Machynlleth in Montgomeryshire. Robert was the second son of Thomas and Rose and, although the date is not definitely known, it is thought that he entered the University of Oxford in about 1525. Again we do not know the topics he studied but we do know that he graduated with a B.A. in 1531 and was elected a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford in that year. All Souls was a graduate College at this time endowed for the study of Church music. It trained men in theology, law and medicine. Certainly we know that he studied medicine at Oxford and was a highly educated man. In later life he was interested in history, collecting British antiquities and manuscripts, and he was an expert in the Anglo-Saxon language. It is reasonable to suppose that he gained his love of antiquities at All Souls College for John Leyland, who was in 1531 chaplain and librarian to King Henry VIII employed by the King for his expertise in antiquities and manuscripts, had studies at All Souls at the same time as, or slightly before, Recorde. It is likely that following his election to a fellowship in 1531 Recorde taught at Oxford for a few years but there are no records to prove this. The next that we know for certain is that he went to Cambridge and studied there for his M.D. There is a record at Cambridge which states that Recorde received a license in medicine in Oxford twelve years earlier and this almost certainly means that Recorde received the degree of B.M. from Oxford although again no record of this has been found. He graduated from Cambridge in 1545, receiving the degree of M.D. He may have taught at Cambridge following the award of his degree but all we know for certain is that some time during two years following 1545 he moved to London where he practiced medicine.

19. Robert Recorde --  Encyclopædia Britannica
continued. recorde, robert Encyclopædia Britannica Article. , recorde, robertphysician, mathematician, and author of introductory mathematics textbooks.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=64514&tocid=215875&query=william herbert

20. [HM] Robert Recorde's Ground Of Artes - Multiplication
HM robert recorde's Ground of Artes multiplication. post a message on this topic. post a message on a new topic. 30 Jan 2003 HM robert recorde's Ground of Artes - multiplication, by Paul Garcia. 31 Jan 2003
http://mathforum.com/epigone/historia/womhalsald
a topic from historia
[HM] Robert Recorde's Ground of Artes - multiplication
post a message on this topic
post a message on a new topic

30 Jan 2003 [HM] Robert Recorde's Ground of Artes - multiplication , by Paul Garcia
31 Jan 2003 Re: [HM] Robert Recorde's Ground of Artes - multiplication , by Daniel E. Otero
The Math Forum

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 1     1-20 of 92    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter