The abbacus books have long been supposed to be reduced versions of Leonardo Fibonacci's Liber abbaci. Analysis of early abbacus books, not least of the first specimen treating of algebra - Jacopo da Firenze's Tractatus algorismi from 1307 - shows instead that abbacus mathematics was an exponentof a more widespread culture of commercial mathematics, already known by Fibonacci, and probably flourishing in Provence and/or Catalonia before it reached Italy. Abbacus algebra - eventually the main inspiration for the algebraic breakthrough of the 16th and 17th centuries - was inspired from a Romance-speaking region outside Italy, most likely located in the Provençal-Catalan area, and ultimately from a similar practitioners' level of Arabic mathematics.
The book contains, along with the English translation, an edition of Jacopo's Tractatus and a commentary analyzing Jacopo's mathematics and its links to Provençal, Catalan, Arabic, Indian and Latin medieval mathematics. It will provide historians of mathematics and mathematics teachers with a new perspective on a period and on processes which eventually reshaped the whole mathematical enterprise in the 17th century.
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