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Apollonius of perga biography of abraham

          Apollonius is believed to have lived in the second half of the third century BCE. From references to Archimedes in Apollonius' writings it is believed that the.

        1. Apollonius is believed to have lived in the second half of the third century BCE. From references to Archimedes in Apollonius' writings it is believed that the.
        2. He is said to have been born at Perga (Greek Πέργη), a small Greek city in southern Asia Minor, when Ptolemy Euergetes was king of Egypt (i.e., between and.
        3. Abraham Ecchellensis was a Maronite Catholic philosopher and linguist involved in the translation of the Bible into Arabic.
        4. Apollonius was born circa B.C.E., some 25 years after Archimedes.
        5. Apollonius of Perga [Pergaeus], Greek geometer of the Alexandrian school, was probably born some twenty-five years later than Archimedes, ie about BC.
        6. Abraham Ecchellensis was a Maronite Catholic philosopher and linguist involved in the translation of the Bible into Arabic....

          Apollonius of Perga


          Biography

          Apollonius of Perga was known as 'The Great Geometer'.

          Little is known of his life but his works have had a very great influence on the development of mathematics, in particular his famous book Conics introduced terms which are familiar to us today such as parabola, ellipse and hyperbola.



          Apollonius of Perga should not be confused with other Greek scholars called Apollonius, for it was a common name. In [1] details of others with the name of Apollonius are given: Apollonius of Rhodes, born about 295 BC, a Greek poet and grammarian, a pupil of Callimachus who was a teacher of Eratosthenes; Apollonius of Tralles, 2nd century BC, a Greek sculptor; Apollonius the Athenian, 1st century BC, a sculptor; Apollonius of Tyana, 1st century AD, a member of the society founded by Pythagoras; Apollonius Dyscolus, 2nd century AD, a Greek grammarian who was reputedly the founder of the systematic study of grammar; and Apollonius of Tyre who is a literary char