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    |  |  Severus Sebokht (575 - 667) |  |  
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				Severus Sebokht (575 - 667) 
 THAT our common numerals are of Hindu origin seems  to
 be a  well-established fact,* and that Europe received them
 
 from the  Arabs seems equally certain, but how and when these
 
 numerals  reached the Arabs is a question that has never been
 
 satisfactorily answered. It is the object of the  present article
 
 to call  the attention of students of the history of mathematics
 
 to newly  discovered evidencef showing that the Hindu
 
 numerals  were known to and justly appreciated by the Syrian
 
 writer  Severus Sebokht who lived in the second half of the
 
 seventh  century; that is, about a hundred years before the
 
 date of  the first definite trace that we have hitherto had of
 
 the  introduction of the system into Bagdad. J It will also be
 
 shown, on  the basis of such information as is available respecting
 
 his life  and works, that Sebokht was in the most
 
 favorable  position for getting information of this kind, and
 
 that he  furthermore had in his possession the most powerful
 
 means for  the propagating of such knowledge.
 
 Severus  Sebokht of Nisibis, bearing the title of bishop,
 
 lived in  the convent of Kenneshre on the Euphrates! in the
 
 time of  the patriarch Athanasius Gammala (who died in 631)
 
 and his  successor John.|| He distinguished himself in the
 
 studies  of philosophy, mathematics, and theology, and in his
 
 time the  convent of Kenneshre became the chief seat of Greek
 
 learning  in western Syria. Of his astronomical and geograph-
 
 * Smith  and Karpinski, The Hindu-Arabic Numerals, Boston, 1911.
 
 f By the  French orientalist M. F. Nau in the Journal Asiatique,  series 10,
 
 vol. 16  (1910).
 
 J Smith  and Karpinski, The Hindu-Arabic Numerals, p. 92.
 
 § W.  Wright, Short History of Syriac Literature, London, 1894, pp.
 
 137-139.
 
 ||  Sebokht took part, together with the Jacobite patriarch Theodorus,
 
 in a  public dispute against the Maronites in the year 659. We have also a
 
 letter  written by him in the year 665. From these details we may conclude
 
 that he  flourished in the beginning of the second half of the seventh century.
 
 (M. F.  Nau, in the Journal Asiatique, series 9, vol. 13, p.  60.)
 
 368 NEW  LIGHT ON OUR NUMERALS. [May,
 
 ical  works there are a few fragments in a manuscript now in
 
 the  British Museum.* These fragments consider such questions
 
 as  whether the heaven surrounds the earth in the form
 
 of a  wheel or of a sphere; the habitable and uninhabitable
 
 portions  of the earth; the measurement of the heaven, the
 
 earth,  and the space between them; and the motion of the sun
 
 and the  moon. His treatise on the plane astrolabe was
 
 published  with a French translation by M. F. Nau in the
 
 Journal Asiatique, series 9, volume 13. Sebokht also wrote  a
 
 short  treatise on eclipses, in which he ridicules the then accepted
 
 belief in  a celestial dragon as the cause of all such
 
 phenomena.!
 
 But the  most interesting of Sebokht's writings for the student
 
 of  history is undoubtedly a fragment of a manuscript^ published
 
 by M. F.  Nau, in the Journal Asiatique (series 10,  volume
 
 16, page  225) in which he directly refers to the Hindu numerals.
 
 He seems  to have been hurt by the arrogance of certain Greek
 
 scholars  who looked down on the Syrians, and in defending
 
 the  latter he claims for them the invention of astronomy.
 
 He  asserts the fact that the Greeks were merely the pupils of
 
 the  Chaldeans of Babylon, and he claims that these same
 
 Chaldeans  were the very Syrians whom his opponents condemn.
 
 He closes  his argument by saying that science is
 
 universal  and is accessible to any nation or to any individual
 
 who takes  the pains to search for it. It is not therefore a
 
 monopoly  of the Greeks, but is international.
 
 It is in  this connection that he mentions the Hindus by way
 
 of  illustration, using the following words: " I will omit all
 
 discussion of the science of the Hindus, a people not  the same
 
 as the  Syrians; their subtle discoveries in this science of
 
 astronomy, discoveries that are more ingenious than  those of
 
 the  Greeks and the Babylonians; their valuable methods of
 
 calculation; and their computing that surpasses  description.
 
 I wish  only to say that this computation is done by means of
 
 nine  signs. If those who believe, because they speak Greek,
 
 that they  have reached the limits of science should know these
 
 things  they would be convinced that there are also others
 
 who know  something." This fragment clearly shows that
 
 not only  did Sebokht know something of the numerals, but
 
 * Add.  14, 538, pp. 153-155.
 
 f See  Notes d'Astronome Syrienne, Journal Asiatique, series  10, vol. 16
 
 (1910).
 
 Ï Ms., Syriac, Paris No. 346.
 
 1917.]  NEW LIGHT ON OUR NUMERALS. 369
 
 that he  understood their full significance, and may even have
 
 known the  zero as Rabbi ben Esra did, in spite of the fact
 
 that he,  too, speaks of nine numerals. There are two questions
 
 that may  immediately arise: (1) How could Sebokht
 
 have  obtained any information about the Hindu numerals?
 
 and (2)  What are the chances that Sebokht was instrumental
 
 in  introducing the numerals to the Arabian scholars?
 
 The first  of these questions may be answered very easily.
 
 Nisibis,  the place where Severus lived, was the chief city* of
 
 Mygdonia,  a small district in the northeast part of Mesopotamia.
 
 It was  situated in a rich and fruitful country, was
 
 long the  center of a very extensive trade, and was the great
 
 northern  emporium for the merchandise of the east and the
 
 west.  Since the exchange of goods is always accompanied
 
 by the  exchange of ideas, it is only reasonable to surmise that
 
 the  different systems of numeration were known in Nisibis,
 
 where  they could hardly escape the attention of a man like
 
 Sebokht,  who would surely have been looking for just such
 
 information.
 
 The  second question is more difficult to answer. It may
 
 be said,  however, that the weight of the evidence is in favor of
 
 Sebokht's  work being at least one of the agencies by means of
 
 which the  knowledge of the numerals was transmitted to the
 
 Arabs. He  was the head of his convent and occupied a commanding
 
 position  in the literature of his country. He had
 
 many  pupils, one of whom, Athanasius of Balad,f was the
 
 patriarch  of the Jacobites, while such others as Jacob of EdessaJ
 
 and  probably George, Bishop of the Arab Tribes,§ were well
 
 known as  translators and polygraphers. We may be certain
 
 that the  knowledge of the numerals possessed on the banks
 
 of the  Euphrates by Severus was transmitted by him to his
 
 numerous  pupils and through them to other scholars all over
 
 Syria.  Since we know that Syrian scholars were employed by
 
 the  caliphs as translators and educators, || it would be only
 
 natural  that these Syrians should impart to the Arabs, among
 
 other  facts relating to the sciences, the knowledge of the Hindu
 
 numerals.
 
 
 COLUMBIA  UNIVERSITY.
 
 
 * See  Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography,
 
 f W.  Wright, Short History of Syriae Literature, pp. 154-155.
 
 Î Ibid., pp. 141-154.
 
 § Ibid.,  pp. 156-159; M. F. Nau in the Journal Asiatique,  series 10,
 
 vol.  16.
 
 
				 
 
  
 
  
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