Thus we find the numerals gradually replacing the Roman forms all over Europe, from the time of Leonardo of Pisa until the seventeenth century. But in the Far East to-day they are quite unknown in many countries, and they still have their way to make. In many parts of India, among the common people of Japan and China, in Siam and generally about the Malay Peninsula, in Tibet, and among the East India islands, the natives still adhere to their own numeral forms. Only as Western civilization is making its way into the commercial life of the East do the numerals as used by us find place, save as the Sanskrit forms appear in parts of India. It is therefore with surprise that the student of mathematics comes to realize how modern are these forms so common in the West, how limited is their use even at the present time, and how slow the world has been and is in adopting such a simple device as the Hindu-Arabic numerals.
INDEX
Transcriber's note: many of the entries refer to footnotes linked from the page numbers given.
Abbo of Fleury, [122]
‛Abdallāh ibn al-Ḥasan, [92]
‛Abdallatīf ibn Yūsuf, [93]
‛Abdalqādir ibn ‛Alī al-Sakhāwī, [6]