Entity usage

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This page lists pages that use the given entity (e.g. Q42). The list is sorted by descending page ID, so that newer pages are listed first.

List of pages that use a given entity

Showing below up to 50 results in range #1 to #50.

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  1. Women mathematicians in France in the mid-twentieth century: Label: en
  2. ‘Thick-rinded fruit of the tree of knowledge’: mathematics education in George Eliot's novels: Label: en
  3. Decoding William Scrots' anamorphic portrait of Edward VI: Label: en
  4. Propositions VIII.4–5 of Euclid'sElementsand the compounding of ratios on the monochord: Label: en
  5. Vito Volterra's construction of a nonconstant function with a bounded, non-Riemann integrable derivative: Label: en
  6. Mathematicians and the early English life insurance industry: Label: en
  7. A Book for the King: John Geddy'sMethodi sive compendii mathematici(1586): Label: en
  8. Observations about Leonardo's drawings for Luca Pacioli: Label: en
  9. Ivor Grattan-Guinness (23 June 1941 – 12 December 2014): Label: en
  10. Making a mathematical textbook: Mutio Oddi'sDello squadro: Label: en
  11. Arithmetical textbooks 1478 to 1886: a progression?: Label: en
  12. ‘Much necessary for all sortes of men’: 450 years of Euclid'sElementsin English: Label: en
  13. The will of Henry Briggs: Label: en
  14. Arthur Mee'sChildren's encyclopediarevisited: Label: en
  15. An eleventh-century Venn diagram: Label: en
  16. The history of the 2-, 4- and 8-square identities: Label: en
  17. Bagatelle as the inspiration for Galton's Quincunx: Label: en
  18. Diagrams and mathematical reasoning: some points, lines, and figures: Label: en
  19. The Neil Bibby Lecture 2006: From Archimedes to limits: understanding real analysis: Label: en
  20. Euler's work on Zeta andL-functions and their special values: Label: en
  21. A contemporary Eulerian walk over the bridges of Kaliningrad: Label: en
  22. Euler's combinatorial mathematics: Label: en
  23. Bartering problems in arithmetic books 1450–1890: Label: en
  24. Poor Robin and Merry Andrew: mathematical humour in Restoration England: Label: en
  25. Did Weierstrass’s differential calculus have a limit-avoiding character? His definition of a limit inϵδstyle: Label: en
  26. The repercussion of José Anastácio da Cunha in Britain and USA in the nineteenth century: Label: en
  27. John Pell’s mathematical papers and the Royal Society’sEnglish Atlas, 1678–82: Label: en
  28. How the old Slavs (Serbs) wrote numbers: Label: en
  29. Letters of William Emerson and Francis Holliday to the publisher, John Nourse: Label: en
  30. Analysis of real world problems in mathematics textbooks of early twentieth and twenty-first century Turkish education: political and social reflections: Label: en
  31. Louis Joel Mordell's time in London: Label: en
  32. Undergraduate algebra in nineteenth-century Oxford: Label: en
  33. The Gresham Professors of Geometry Part 2: the next three hundred years: Label: en
  34. The Gresham Professors of Geometry Part 1: the first one hundred years: Label: en
  35. Breaking social barriers: Florentia Fountoukli (1869–1915): Label: en
  36. William Wallace's chorograph (1839): a rare mathematical instrument: Label: en
  37. Euler as an Educator: Label: en
  38. Filling in the short blanks: musings on bringing the historiography of mathematics to the classroom: Label: en
  39. A forgotten contrivance: a study of the diagonal scale and its appearance in mathematics texts from 1714 to the present: Label: en
  40. The medieval counting table revisited: a brief introduction and description of its use during the early modern period: Label: en
  41. From Brahmagupta to Euler: on the formula for the area of a cyclic quadrilateral: Label: en
  42. A new theoretical approach to sample problems and deductive reasoning in Sanskrit mathematical texts: Label: en
  43. A historical teaching module on ‘the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics’: Boolean algebra and Shannon circuits: Label: en
  44. Investigating a claim for Russian priority in the abstract definition of a ring: Label: en
  45. The deification of Newton in 1711: Label: en
  46. A historical perspective on location problems: Label: en
  47. Charles Hutton: ‘One of the greatest mathematicians in Europe’?: Label: en
  48. A forgotten booklet by Goldbach now rediscovered and three versions of its contents: Label: en
  49. ‘To the publike advancement’ John Collins and the promotion of mathematical knowledge in Restoration England: Label: en
  50. Mengoli's mathematical ideas in Leibniz's excerpts: Label: en

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