Adam Ries


Quick Info

Born
23 December 1492
Staffelstein (near Bamberg), Upper Franconia (now Germany)
Died
30 March 1559
Annaberg, Saxony (now Annaberg-Buchholz, Germany)

Summary
Adam Ries was a German mathematician who published one of the first widely available arithmetic texts.

Biography

German children today know the expression Das macht nach Adam Riese... (that gives according to Adam Ries) when doing arithmetic. From the list of references attached to this article, which is only a small selection of the vast amount of material concerning Ries, it will be seen that there remains a very considerable level of interest in this mathematician.

Adam Ries's name appears with a number of different spellings, a common phenomenon with people living around this time who were certainly not consistent with their own spelling of their names. Ries himself used the forms Ries and Risz when he signed documents, but other forms of his name such as Riese (used by his father), Ris and Ryse are also found. His mother, Eva Kittler, was the second wife of his father Contz Ries (born 1478 in Staffelstein, died 1506 in Staffelstein) who owned a mill in Staffelstein as well as several houses and a vineyard. Certainly Contz Ries was well-off. After the death of his first wife Anna, with whom he had several children, he married again in 1492. Adam was the first child of this second marriage to Eva, having younger siblings Katarina, Margareta and Conradus. He became known as "the greatest son of Staffelstein".

We know nothing of Adam's education but, given that his family were in Staffelstein as he was growing up, it is likely that he attended school there. In 1509, at the age of sixteen, he was living with his younger brother Conradus in Zwickau where Conradus was attending the Latin school. He moved to Annaberg, in the Kingdom of Saxony, in 1515 and we know from his own writings (see Bruno Berlet [19]) that during this stay in Annaberg he studied, and solved, some problems in algebra. Wolfgang Kaunzner, in [16], wants:-
... to draw attention to the fact that Adam Ries [before becoming a 'Rechenmeister'] busied himself with then current mathematical problems and in doing so occupied a position equal to that of his contemporary Cossists.
There is documentary evidence that on 22 April 1517 he was back in Staffelstein, for on this day he appeared before the Council of Staffelstein trying to settle a dispute over inheritance.

In 1518 he moved to Erfurt where he ran a school as 'Rechenmeister' (master of calculations) and 'Hofarithmeticus' and, although he did not attend university there, he had many contacts with academics from the university and he profited greatly from these contacts. Perhaps the most important friendship was with Georg Sturtz (1490-1548) who was an academic at the University of Erfurt. Sturtz's home was a famous meeting place of the Humanists and Ries made many useful contacts there. In fact it was Sturtz who gave Ries a collection of manuscripts on algebra and arithmetic which had been given to him by Johannes Widman. Ries wrote his first two books while in Erfurt: these are Rechnung auff der linihen (1518) and Rechnung auff der linihen und Federn (1522). We give some details of these works below. In 1523 Ries became 'Bergbeamter' (engineer and inspector of mines) in Annaberg, which is a centre for the silver-mining region of Saxonia, and he also taught mathematics there. He had already been working on a manuscript for an algebra book, Coss, and it was after settling in Annaberg that he completed the text. We look at details of this work below and also how it became to be published in recent times.

After settling in Annaberg, he got to know Anna Leuber (1495-1545), from Freiberg, who was the daughter of the master fitter Andreas Leuber and his wife Margaret Birner. Adam and Anna were married in 1525 in Saint Anne's Church, Annaberg (at this time a Catholic church, but it became a Lutheran church in 1539). In the same year of 1525, Ries took the necessary oath to become a citizen of the city. He bought a house in Johannisgasse and there Adam and Anna Ries brought up their eight children, five sons and three daughters. Three of the sons, Adam, Abraham and Jacob, became mathematicians working in Annaberg, while Isaac, one of other two sons, became a 'Visierer' (weights and measures master) in Leipzig. The fifth son, Paul, moved to Wiesa, close to Annaberg, where he became a judge and was an important landowner.

Returning to the year 1525, this was when Ries became 'Rezessschreiber' (recorder of mining production) in Annaberg, then in 1532 'Gegenschreiber' (bookkeeper recording of ownership of mining shares) and, from 1533 to 1539, 'Zehnter auf dem Geyer' (financial administrator for mining in the district). The year 1539 marked a substantial change for Annaberg which we hinted at above when we noted that the church in which Ries married changed from Catholic to Lutheran in 1539. This change resulted when the Catholic ruler of the town, Duke Georg, was replaced by his Lutheran brother Heinrich in that year. Ries's name appears in lists of Lutherans living in Annaberg made in 1530 so the arrival of the Reformation in Annaberg in 1539 must have helped Ries's career. That this happened is clear from the fact that, in 1539, Ries became court mathematician and was given the title Churfürstlich Sächsicher Hofarithmeticus. At this time he purchased the Riesenburg, a small castle, outside Annaberg almost half-way between Annaberg and Wiesa. The Riesenburg still exists today close to the Wohngebiet Adam Ries.

Ries's income came mainly from his arithmetic textbooks. The first of these was Rechnung auff der linihen written while he was in Erfurt and printed in that city in 1518 by Mathes Maler. The book was intended to teach people how to use a calculating board similar to an abacus. This type of device is described by the Money Museum:-
Four horizontal and five vertical lines were painted or carved on the calculating boards to represent the decimal values in ascending order. The arithmetical sums were worked out with the help of coin-like counters. They were placed on the respective lines according to the values of the numbers and then, depending on the calculation, these were moved, removed or added to the lines until the final result could be read off. No numbers were printed on the counters; they amounted to as much as the line on which they were placed.
No copy of the first edition of this book has survived, the earliest that we have is the second of the four editions which was published in 1525. Ries states clearly in this second edition that the book is intended for children and he must have written it to aid his school teaching at this time. A third edition was published in 1527. The second of Ries's books written while he was in Erfurt was Rechnung auff der linihen und Federn (1522). This book ran to over 100 editions, which is a remarkable achievement. It was aimed at apprentice craftsmen, not at schoolchildren, and in addition to explaining the use of the lined calculating board, this book described calculating with Indo-Arabic numerals. A wood-cut illustrates the purpose of the book by showing two people calculating with the rival methods, one using the calculating board, the other using Indo-Arabic numerals. Clearly Ries taught both the old method of calculating, derived from the abacus, and the new method, derived from the Indians, which at that time was forbidden in most countries! The third of Ries's arithmetic books Rechenung nach der lenge, auff den Linihen vnd Feder is often known as the Practica; it contains the picture of Ries which is reproduced above (the only image from a contemporary source). The book appeared in 1550, printed in Leipzig by Jakob Bärwald, and was a textbook written for everyone, not just for scientists and engineers. The book explains addition, subtraction, multiplication and, very surprisingly for that period, also division. At that time division could only be learnt at the University of Altdorf (near Nürnberg) and even most scientists did not know how to divide; so it is astonishing that Ries explained it in a textbook designed for everyone to use. The reason for the long delay between the appearance of Ries's first two arithmetic texts and this third one was not because this third arithmetic was a much later work. Indeed most of the material had been written by Ries by 1525 but the printing costs were very high and he did not have the necessary funds to pay a printer. However, eventually the Elector Maurice of Saxony agreed to advance him enough to pay the printing costs and publication could proceed.

Among his other books were Ein Gerechnet Büchlein auff den Schöffel, Eimer vnd Pfundgewicht... (1533) which contained tables to allow prices of several items to be found when the price of one was known. This work, also known as the Annaberger Brotordnung , showed how to calculate the weight of a loaf on the assumption that the price of grain varied and the price of a loaf remained constant. In the Preface, Ries says that he has written the book:-
... so that the poor common man will not be cheated when buying bread.
We still have to say something about Ries's algebra book Coss (1525). Here we are dealing with a very different type of work in terms of its importance for, unlike the arithmetic books which were printed and could therefore be produced in great numbers and widely read, the Coss remained in manuscript and was therefore hardly read by anyone. Dirk Struik, reviewing [7], explains what happened to Ries's manuscript of Coss:-
Adam Ries has remained in German memory because of his Rechenbücher -schoolbooks on arithmetic, popular for a century and a half. It is less known that he also wrote an algebra, called the Cosz, but this work has remained in manuscript form. Three of these manuscripts were bound together in 1664 by the Dresden Rechenmeister Martin Kupffer. They were thought to be lost until they were found in 1855, and are now kept at the Erzgebirgsmuseum Annaberg-Buchholz, Annaberg being the Saxonian mining town where Ries lived as a respected citizen and teacher for many years until his death. The impressive folio facsimile, published on the occasion of the 500th birthday of Ries, contains three manuscripts: Cosz I (pp. 1-325) was finished in 1524, Cosz II (pp. 329-499) was written between 1545 and 1550 ...
Rainer Gebhardt writes [5]:-
In addition to his famous arithmetic primers Adam Ries has also written an extensive algebra book: The Coss. The symbol for the unknown, or variable, was called coss in the middle ages. Adam Ries also called it radix, root or thing. Ries's Coss, which, contrary to contemporary custom, was not written in Latin, but in German, is a link between the medieval descriptive algebra and the analytical algebra of modern days.
Ries's fame was considerable and much has been done over the years to honour him and keep his name to the fore. A bronze statue which was erected in Annaberg in 1893 was later melted down for use in armaments, but has been replaced by a stone statue. In Staffelstein, the city of his birth, a number of plaques and stone reliefs have been erected. Perhaps the most spectacular of the monuments to Ries is in Erfurt where a bronze bust, plaque and calculating table keep his memory alive. We illustrate in our pictures of Ries above a stamp which was issued in 1959 to commemorate the 400th anniversary of his birth. Another stamp was issued in 1992 to commemorate the 500th anniversary of his death.


References (show)

  1. 1. K Vogel, Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990).
    See THIS LINK.
  2. W Arnold, Adam Ries, in H Wussing and W Arnold, Biographien bedeutender Mathematiker (Berlin, 1983).
  3. S Deschauer, Das zweite Rechenbuch von Adam Ries : Eine moderne Textfassung mit Kommentar und metrologischem Anhang und einer Einführung in Leben und Werk des Rechenmeisters (Braunschweig, 1992).
  4. F Deubner, Nach Adam Riese: Leben und Wirken des grossen Rechenmeisters (Leipzig-Jena, 1959).
  5. R Gebhardt (ed.), Adam Ries, Einblicke in die Coss von Adam Ries (B G Teubner Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Stuttgart; Verlag der Fachvereine, Zürich, 1994).
  6. R Gebhardt and F Albrecht (eds.), Rechenmeister und Cossisten der frühen Neuzeit (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1996).
  7. W Kaunzner and H Wussing (eds.), Adam Ries, Coss (B G Teubner Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Stuttgart, 1992).
  8. R Leuck and S Odermatt, Der Dreisatz bei Adam Ries und heute (GRIN Verlag, 2010).
  9. B Luderer, Das macht nach Adam Ries: historische Rechenaufgaben zu Multiplikation, Division und Dreisatz (Techn. Univ., Fak. f. Math., Chemnitz, 2004)
  10. B Luderer (ed.), Adam Ries and his 'Coss' : a contribution to the development of algebra in 16th century Germany (Gutenbergplatz, Leipzig, 2004).
  11. W Roch, Adam Riese: Ein Lebensbild des grossen Rechenmeisters (Frankfurt, 1959).
  12. W Roch, Adam Ries: Ein Lebensbild (Leipzig, 1992).
  13. P Rochhaus, Adam Ries: Vater des modernen Rechnens (Sutton, 2008).
  14. C A Schwengeler, Adam Ries - Der Rechenmeister (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1994).
  15. H Wussing, Adam Ries : Biographien hervorrangender Naturwissenschaftler, Techniker und Mediziner (Leipzig, 1989).
  16. W Arnold, Adam Ries, in Hans Wussing and Wolfgang Arnold (eds.), Eine Sammlung von Biographien (Aulis Verlag Deubner & Co. KG, Cologne, 1978), 105-111.
  17. F L Bauer, Ries und Schickard, Informatik Spektrum 15 (1995), 225-228.
  18. B Berlet, Adam Riesens Coss, in Adam Ries - Humanist, Rechenmeister, Bergbeamter (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1993), 205-244.
  19. B Berlet, Adam Ries, in Adam Ries - Humanist, Rechenmeister, Bergbeamter (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1993), 167-199.
  20. H Beyrich, Aus den Aufgaben des Rechenmeisters Adam Ries (1492-1559) zur Methode des doppelten falschen Ansatzes (der regula falsi), in Adam Ries - Humanist, Rechenmeister, Bergbeamter (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1993), 59-68.
  21. H Deubner, Adam Ries - Rechenmeister des deutschen Volkes. I, NTM Schr. Geschichte Naturwiss. Tech. Medizin 7 (1) (1970), 1-22.
  22. H Deubner, Adam Ries - Rechenmeister des deutschen Volkes. I, II, NTM Schr. Geschichte Naturwiss. Tech. Medizin 7 (2) (1970), 98-114.
  23. H Deubner, Adam Ries - Rechenmeister des deutschen Volkes. III, NTM Schr. Geschichte Naturwiss. Tech. Medizin 8 (1) (1971), 58-69.
  24. B Eichler, Sprachwissenschaftliche Anmerkungen zu Adam Ries und Heinrich Grammateus, Heinrich Schreyber aus Erfurt, genannt Grammateus, Algorismus 20 (Inst. Gesch. Natur.wiss., Munich, 1996), 131-141.
  25. R Gebhardt, Das macht nach Adam Ries(e) ... Zum 450. Todestag des Rechenmeisters, Mitt. Dtsch. Math.-Ver. 17 (2) (2009), 117-122.
  26. W Kaunzner, Über die beiden nachgelassenen mathematischen Handschriften von Adam Ries, in Vestigia mathematica (Amsterdam, 1993), 173-204.
  27. W Kaunzner, Adam Ries als Cossist, in Adam Ries - Humanist, Rechenmeister, Bergbeamter (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1993), 9-21.
  28. W Kaunzner, Die algebraischen Schriften des Adam Ries, in 100 Jahre Adam- Ries- Denkmal (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1994), 81-89.
  29. W Kaunzner, Neues zu Adam Ries aus Staffelstein und zu Andreas Alexander aus Regensburg, Sudhoffs Arch. 81 (2) (1997), 211-226.
  30. J Lehmann, Vierundzwanzig Aufgaben aus der Feder von Adam Ries, in Adam Ries - Humanist, Rechenmeister, Bergbeamter (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1993), 111-125.
  31. U Reich, Hat Adam Ries studiert?, Sudhoffs Arch. 78 (1) (1994), 122-123.
  32. U Reich, Hat Adam Ries studiert? Adam Rys de Tremonia hat in Köln studiert!, in 100 Jahre Adam- Ries- Denkmal (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1994), 115-129.
  33. P Rochhaus, Der Adam-Ries-Forscher Bruno Berlet (1825-1892), in Adam Ries - Humanist, Rechenmeister, Bergbeamter (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1993), 23-27.
  34. K Vogel, Adam Riese, der deutschen Rechenmeister, Deutsches Museum. Abhandlungen und Berichte 27 (3) (1959), 1-37.
  35. H Wussing, Adam Ries - Rechenmeister und Cossist, Osterreich. Akad. Wiss. Math.-Natur. Kl. Sitzungsber. II 195 (1-3) (1986), 195-211.
  36. H Wussing, Adam Ries : Stationen seines Lebens, in Adam Ries - Humanist, Rechenmeister, Bergbeamter (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1993), 1-7.
  37. H Wussing, Abraham Ries als Cossist : über den Codex C 411 von Abraham Ries zur 'Coss', in 100 Jahre Adam- Ries- Denkmal (Adam-Ries-Bund, Annaberg-Buchholz, 1994), 91-107.
  38. H Wussing, Adam Ries : Rechenmeister und Cossist. Zum 500. Geburtstag., Jahrbuch Überblicke Mathematik (Braunschweig, 1992), 159-172.

Additional Resources (show)


Cross-references (show)


Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update January 2012