Pages that link to "Item:Q124022"
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The following pages link to British Journal for the History of Mathematics (Q124022):
Displayed 50 items.
- Dicuil (9th century) on triangular and square numbers (Q124025) (← links)
- Decoding chancery records from the 1240s (Q4995623) (← links)
- David Gregory, John Arbuthnot and their roles in the early development of probability in Great Britain (Q4995624) (← links)
- Introducing differential calculus in Spain: The fluxion of the product and the quadrature of curves by Tomàs Cerdà (Q4995626) (← links)
- Thomas Harriot: a life in science (Q4995627) (← links)
- Dirichlet. A mathematical biography (Q4995628) (← links)
- Kepler’s derivation of the bisection of the earth’s orbit in<i>Astronomia Nova</i> (Q5030477) (← links)
- Procedures of Leibnizian infinitesimal calculus: an account in three modern frameworks (Q5030479) (← links)
- Mathematical women in the British Isles 1878–1940: using the Davis archive (Q5030480) (← links)
- Calculus Gems (Q5030481) (← links)
- Women’s participation in mathematics in Scotland, 1730–1850 (Q5085683) (← links)
- Why was Leonhard Euler blind? (Q5085686) (← links)
- Linear algebra and multivariate analysis in statistics: development and interconnections in the twentieth century (Q5085687) (← links)
- A history of solving some famous problems in mathematical analysis (Q5085688) (← links)
- William Morgan, Eighteenth-century actuary, mathematician and radical (Q5085689) (← links)
- Symbols and things: mathematics in the age of steam (Q5085690) (← links)
- ‘What to solve?’ – on Judita Cofman’s research on mathematics and its teaching (Q5085691) (← links)
- Medieval Europe’s satanic ciphers: on the genesis of a modern myth (Q5108294) (← links)
- Jacob Bernoulli's analyses of the <i>Funicularia</i> problem (Q5108296) (← links)
- Henry Parr Hamilton (1794–1880) and analytical geometry at Cambridge (Q5108297) (← links)
- The history of mathematics: a source-based approach volume 1 (Q5108299) (← links)
- 99 Variations on a proof (Q5108300) (← links)
- The mathematical world of Charles L. Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) (Q5108301) (← links)
- Professor Alexander (Alex) D. D. Craik: 1938–2019 (Q5108302) (← links)
- A mathematical poetry book from Nepal (Q5148918) (← links)
- Continuity between Cauchy and Bolzano: issues of antecedents and priority (Q5148919) (← links)
- ‘An inalienable prerogative of a liberated spirit’: postulating American mathematics (Q5148920) (← links)
- Pythagoras’ legacy (Q5148921) (← links)
- Heavenly numbers. Astronomy and authority in early imperial China (Q5148922) (← links)
- Women who count: Honoring African American women mathematicians (Q5148923) (← links)
- Peter M Neumann OBE (1940–2020) (Q5163864) (← links)
- The BSHM: the first fifty years (Q5163865) (← links)
- Mathematical books and Frankfurt book fair catalogues: the acquisition of mathematical works by Robert Ashley in early modern London (Q5163867) (← links)
- The B B Newman spelling theorem (Q5163868) (← links)
- Quantifying the Unquantifiable: the role of the mathematicisation of philosophy during the Scottish Enlightenment (Q5163870) (← links)
- Editorial (Q5217284) (← links)
- ‘There are great alterations in the geometry of late’. The rise of Isaac Newton’s early Scottish circle (Q5217285) (← links)
- Beating untrodden paths: James Gregory and his Italian readers (Q5217286) (← links)
- George Sinclair’s neglected <i>Treatises</i>: some influences and reactions (Q5217287) (← links)
- Colin Maclaurin (1698–1746): a Newtonian between theory and practice (Q5217288) (← links)
- Colin Maclaurin (1698–1746) and his contemporaries on wind and water: the local and the universal (Q5217289) (← links)
- Descriptive geometry, the spread of a polytechnic art: the legacy of Gaspard Monge (Q5217290) (← links)
- A richer picture of mathematics: the Göttingen tradition and beyond (Q5217291) (← links)
- Africa and mathematics: from colonial findings back to the Ishango Rods (Q5217293) (← links)
- Juan Caramuel (1606–1682) and the Spanish version of the Passedix game (Q5241904) (← links)
- The recreational mathematics activities of ordinary nineteenth century Americans: A case study of two mathematics puzzle columns and their contributors (Q5241906) (← links)
- ‘A man who has infinite capacity for making things go’: Sir Edmund Taylor Whittaker (1873–1956) (Q5241907) (← links)
- Visual culture and mathematics in the early modern period (Q5241909) (← links)
- A common family weakness for statistics: essays on Francis Galton, George Darwin and the normal curve of evolutionary biology (Q5241910) (← links)
- L’Élite sous la mitraille: les normaliens, les mathématiques et la Grande Guerre, 1900–1925 (Q5241912) (← links)