Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T14:21:06.926Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Renaissance Representations of Islamic Science: Bernardino Baldi and His Lives of Mathematicians

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2008

Ann Moyer
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania

Abstract

During the later European Renaissance, some scholars began to write about the history of scientific disciplines. Some of the issues and problems they faced in constructing their narratives have had long-term effects on the history of science. One of these issues was how to relate scholars from the Islamic traditions of scientific scholarship to those of antiquity and of postclassical Europe. Recent historians of science have rejected a once-common Western opinion that the contribution of these Islamic scientists had lain mainly in their preservation of ancient texts that were then handed over to Western scholars, who mastered them and then moved beyond them as part of the scientific revolution. This article examines the first effort to write a history of mathematics, the Lives of the Mathematicians by Bernardino Baldi (1553–1617), to determine how he treated this issue in his work. Baldi's efforts are especially important here because he was also an early European scholar of Arabic.

An examination of the work shows that Baldi did not share the negative views held by later Europeans about these non-European scientists. However, despite his knowledge of Arabic he had no active contacts with ongoing mathematical scholarship in Arabic. As a consequence, his narrative does follow the chronology of those later Europeans who would limit consideration of these mathematicians to approximately the ninth to the fourteenth centuries. In Baldi's writings, then, we can see the later narrative shape used by Western historians of science until recent years, but not the subsidiary role accorded to non-European scholars.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alkindi, Jacobus. 1507. De pluviis. Venice.Google Scholar
Alkindi, Jacobus. 1531. De medicinarum compositarum gradibus investigandis. Translated by Gerard of Cremona. Strasbourg.Google Scholar
Amaturo, R. 1963. In Dizionario Biografico degli llaliani, s.v. “Baldi, Bernardino.” Rome: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana.Google Scholar
Baldi, Bernardino. 1707. Cronica de'matematici. Urbino.Google Scholar
Baldi, Bernardino. 1859. Versi e prose scelte. Edited by Ugolini, Filippo and Polidori, Filippo-Luigi. Florence: Le Monnier.Google Scholar
Baldi, Bernardino. 1998. Le vile de'matematici. Edited by Nenci, Elio. Milan: F. Angeli.Google Scholar
Barozzi, Francesco. 1585. Cosmographia in Quatuor Libros distributa. Venice. BB. See Boncompagni.Google Scholar
Bilinski, Bronislaw. 1975. “‘Vite dei matematici’di Bernardino Baldi nei ritrovati manoscritti.” Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei Rendiconti Classe Sci. Fis. Mat. Nat. 59:305–21.Google Scholar
Bilinski, Bronislaw. 1977. Prolegomena alle “Vile dei matematici” di Bernardino Baldi (1587–1596). Wroclaw (Breslau): Zaklad Narodowy Imienia Ossolinskich Wydawnictwo Polskiej Akademii Nauk.Google Scholar
Boncompagni, Baldassarre. 18681887. Bullettino di bibliografia e di storia delle scienze matematiche e fisiche (abbrev. BE). 20 vols. Rome.Google Scholar
Cardano, Girolamo. 1550. De Subtilitate. Nuremberg.Google Scholar
Dannenfeldt, Karl H. 1955. “The Renaissance Humanists and the Knowledge of Arabic.” Studies in the Renaissance 2: 96117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drake, Stillman. 1991. In Dictionary of Scientific Biography, s.v. “Baldi, Bernardino.” New York: Scribner.Google Scholar
Feingold, Mordechai. 1996. “ Decline and Fall: Arabic Science in Seventeenth-Century England.” In Tradition, Transmission, Transformation, edited by Ragep, F. Jamil and Ragep, Sally P. with Steven, Livesey 441–69. Leiden: Brill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Firmicus Maternus, Julius. 1499. Iulii Firmici Astronomicorum libri octo … Venice.Google Scholar
Genebrard, Gilberto. 1581. Chronographiae. Cologne.Google Scholar
Gesner, Conrad. 1545. Bibliotheca universalis. Zurich.Google Scholar
Cintio, Giraldi Battista, Giovanni. 1554. Discorsi. Venice.Google Scholar
Giuntini, Francesco. 1478. Speculum astrologiae. Lyons.Google Scholar
Giuntini, Francesco. 1578. Commentaria in Sphaeram Ioannis de Sacro Bosco. Lyons.Google Scholar
Holt, P. M. 1973. “An Oxford Arabist, Edward Pococke (1604–91).” In Studies in the History of the Near East, edited by Holt, P. M. 326. London: Cass.Google Scholar
Jones, John Robert. 1994. “The Medici Oriental Press (Rome 1584–1614) and the Impact of its Arabic Publications on Northern Europe.” In Russell, 1994, 88108.Google Scholar
Mater, Nabil. 1998. Islam in Britain 1558–1685. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maurolico, Francesco. 1575. De sphaera. In Opuscula. Venice.Google Scholar
Enrico, Narducci ed. 1886. “Vite inedite di matematici italiani da Bernardino Baldi.” In BB 19 (1886): 335406, 437–89, 521640.Google Scholar
Enrico, Narducci ed. 1892. Catalogo di Manoscritti oraposseduti da D. Baldassarre Boncompagni, 2nd. ed. Rome.Google Scholar
Peurbach, Georg. 1553. Theoricae novae planetarum. Wittenberg.Google Scholar
Reinhold, Erasmus. 1551. Prutenicae tabulae coelestium motuum. Tübingen.Google Scholar
Rhodiginus, Caelius Lodovicus. 1516. Lectionum antiquarum libri. Venice.Google Scholar
Rose, Paul Lawrence. 1974. “Rediscovered manuscripts of the ‘Vite de’matematici’ and Mathematical Works by Bernardino Baldi (1533–1617).” Accademia Na-zionale dei Lincei Rendiconti Classe Sci. Fis. Mat. Nat. 56: 272–79.Google Scholar
Rose, Paul Lawrence. 1975. The Italian Renaissance of Mathematics: Studies on Humanists and Mathematicians from Petrarch to Galileo. Geneva: Droz.Google Scholar
Russell, G. A. ed. 1994. The ‘Arabick’ Interest of the Natural Philosophers in Seventeenth-Century England. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Siraisi, Nancy. 1987. Avicenna in Renaissance Italy: The Canon and Medical Teaching in Italian Universities after 1500. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steinschneider, M. ed.[1872] 1873. Vite di matematici Arabi, tratte da un'opera inedita di Bernardino Baldi, con note. Rome: Tipografia delle scienze matematiche e fisiche. (Originally published in BB 5 [1872]).Google Scholar
Stoeffler, Johannes. 1534. In Prodi Diadochi authoris, gravissimi Sphaeram mundi … commentarius. Tübingen.Google Scholar
Tiraquellus, Andrea. 1549. Tractatus de Nobilitate et iure primigeniorum. Lyons.Google Scholar
Toomer, G. J. 1996. Eastern Wisedome and Learning: The Study of Arabic in Seventeenth-Century England. Oxford: Clarendon.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zaccagnini, Guido. 1908. Bernardino Baldinella vita a nelle opere, 2nd ed. Pistoia: Soc. An. Tipo-Litografica Toscana.Google Scholar