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9. Note on the Colouring of Maps

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2014

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Extract

From the Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, No. 106, p. 501, it appears the colouring of maps is receiving attention. This note bears chiefly upon the history of the matter.

Some thirty years ago, when I was attending Professor De Morgan's class, my brother, Francis Guthrie, who had recently ceased to attend them (and who is now professor of mathematics at the South African University, Cape Town), showed me the fact that the greatest necessary number of colours to be used in colouring a map so as to avoid identity of colour in lineally contiguous districts is four. I should not be justified, after this lapse of time, in trying to give his proof, but the critical diagram was as in the margin. With my brother's permission I submitted the theorem to Professor De Morgan, who expressed himself very pleased with it; accepted it as new; and, as I am informed by those who subsequently attended his classes, was in the habit of acknowledging whence he had got his information.

Type
Proceedings 1879–80
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1880

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