Al-Umawi's full name is Abu Abdallah Yaish ibn Ibrahim ibn Yusuf ibn
Simak al-Umawi. There are clear problems with his date of birth and death
date. It is claimed that he died in 1489, but there is a marginal note on one
of his works allowing the copyist to teach the material and this note is dated
1373 (this is not strictly true but the date given corresponds to 1373 after
changing calendars). The copyist records the date he completed making the
copy, also 1373, and the place in which he made the copy which is Mount Qasyun
in Damascus, Syria. If al-Umawi wrote his manuscript before 1373 he cannot
have lived to 1489 so one date must be incorrect but there is no other
evidence as to which is correct and which is wrong. It is usual to regard al-Umawi
as a 14th century mathematician and we have given rough dates based on the
assumption that the manuscript date is correct.
Although al-Umawi lived in Damascus in Syria, he came from Andalusia in the
south of Spain. The name Andalusia comes from the Arabic "Al-Andalus" given to
this district by the Muslims who conquered it in the 8th century. The unified
Spanish Muslim state broke up in the early 11th century but Muslims from
Africa kept Spanish Islam strong into the 14th century. Indeed al-Umawi was a
Muslim but the mathematical scholarship of the Muslim world at this time was
certainly not uniform. There were differences in the numerals used in western
areas (which al-Umawi came from) and those used in the east. Indeed some
scholars find it surprising that al-Umawi as a westerner wrote an arithmetic
text for those in the east. The usual perception is that, at this time. the
arithmetical skills of the east exceeded those of the west.
Two texts by al-Umawi which have survived are Marasim al-intisab fi'ilm
al-hisab (On arithmetical rules and procedures), and Raf'al-ishkal fi
ma'rifat al-ashkal which is a work on mensuration. It is the first of
these two works which contains the 1373 date referred to in the first
paragraph and it is the most interesting of the two texts.
Before describing the Marasim we should make some brief comments
about al-Umawi's work calculating lengths and areas. In it al-Umawi gives
rules for calculating: lengths of chords and lengths of arcs of circles (using
Pythagoras's theorem); areas of circles, areas of segments of circles, areas
of triangles and quadrilaterals; volumes of spheres, volumes of cones and
volumes of prisms. It is not a work of any great importance and Saidan, writes
in [1] that:-
... it is a small treatise of seventeen folios in which we find
nothing on mensuration that the arithmeticians of the East did not know.
Let us now return to the more important treatise on arithmetical rules and
procedures. This is the earliest surviving arithmetical treatise written by an
Arab from Spain, so it is interesting to see the content of the work. After
describing the very briefly the basic arithmetical operations of addition and
multiplication, al-Umawi moves on to discuss the summation of series.
Among the series al-Umawi considers are arithmetic and geometric series. He
considers the sum of the first n
polygonal numbers,
that is 1 + (r - 1)d summed from r = 1 to r = n.
These sums of polygonal numbers are called
pyramidal numbers
and al-Umawi then considers the sums of the first n pyramidal numbers.
In discussing
r3,
(2r+1)3,
and
(2r)3
al-Umawi was giving results which al-Karaji had proved geometrically 400 years
earlier.
Al-Umawi then describes casting out sevens, eights, nines, and elevens.
Although he only gives these special cases, the general rule which they all
obey is the following: take a number n written in decimal notation as
n = aq +10a1 + 102a2
+ 103a3 + ...
Let rj = 10j (mod t)
where, as far as al-Umawi is concerned, t = 7, 8, 9, or 11. Then if
Sajrj is divisible by t
so is n. This theorem is attributed to Pascal three hundred years after
al-Umawi, and indeed al-Umawi only gives the special cases mention here.
However, he does note that the sequence r1 , r2
, r3 , r4 , r5 , ...
recurs after finitely many steps in each of the cases he considers.
Some results appearing in this work by al-Umawi are not found in any other
Arabic arithemetics. He gives some interesting conditions for the decimal
representation of a number n to be a square:
n must either end in 00, 1, 4, 5, 6, or 9;
if n ends in 6, the 10's place is odd, otherwise the 10's place is
even;
if n ends in 5 then the 10's place must be 2;
n must leave a remainder of 0, 1, 2, or 4 on division by 7;
n must leave a remainder of 0, 1, or 4 on division by 8;
n must leave a remainder of 0, 1, 4, or 7 on division by 9.
Al-Umawi gives similar results for n to be a cube including:
n must leave a remainder of 0, 1, or 6 on division by 7;
n must leave a remainder of 0, 1, 3, 5, or 7 on division by 8;
n must leave a remainder of 0, 1, or 8 on division by 9.
None of these results are hard to prove today (try them!) with our
understanding of the decimal representation of numbers. One has to remember
that these results are about decimal representations rather than about numbers
themselves and show how an understanding of the decimal system was progressing
at a time when Christian Europe (if I may call it that) had little interest in
anything beyond the mathematics of the ancient Greeks.
If you have enjoyed proving these results due to al-Umawi then here is one
more he gives in the Marasim. If the integer n is a square and
its final digit is 1, then either both the 100's place and 1/2 the 10's place
are both even or they are both odd.