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[[File:Sangaku of Konnoh Hachimangu 1859.jpg|thumb|A Sangaku dedicated to Konnoh Hachimangu (Shibuya, Tokyo) in 1859.]]'''Sangaku''' or '''San Gaku''' (算額; lit. translation: calculation tablet) are Japanese geometrical problems or theorems on wooden tablets which were placed as offerings at Shinto shrines or Buddhist temples during the Edo period by members of all social classes.
[[File:Sangaku of Konnoh Hachimangu 1859.jpg|thumb|A Sangaku dedicated to Konnoh Hachimangu (Shibuya, Tokyo) in 1859.]]'''Sangaku''' or '''San Gaku''' (算額; lit. translation: calculation tablet) are Japanese [[Geometry (nonfiction)|geometrical]] problems or theorems on wooden tablets which were placed as offerings at Shinto shrines or Buddhist temples during the Edo period by members of all social classes.


The Sangaku were painted in color on wooden tablets (''ema'') and hung in the precincts of Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines as offerings to the kami and buddhas, as challenges to the congregants, or as displays of the solutions to questions. Many of these tablets were lost during the period of modernization that followed the Edo period, but around nine hundred are known to remain.
The Sangaku were painted in color on wooden tablets (''ema'') and hung in the precincts of Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines as offerings to the kami and buddhas, as challenges to the congregants, or as displays of the solutions to questions. Many of these tablets were lost during the period of modernization that followed the Edo period, but around nine hundred are known to remain.
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== Fiction cross-reference ==
== Fiction cross-reference ==
* [[Gnomon algorithm]]
* [[Mathematics]]


== Nonfiction cross-reference ==
== Nonfiction cross-reference ==


* [[Geometry (nonfiction)]]
* [[Mathematics (nonfiction)]]
* [[Mathematics (nonfiction)]]


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[[Category:Nonfiction (nonfiction)]]
[[Category:Nonfiction (nonfiction)]]
[[Category:Geometry (nonfiction)]]
[[Category:Mathematics (nonfiction)]]

Latest revision as of 19:47, 6 December 2017

A Sangaku dedicated to Konnoh Hachimangu (Shibuya, Tokyo) in 1859.

Sangaku or San Gaku (算額; lit. translation: calculation tablet) are Japanese geometrical problems or theorems on wooden tablets which were placed as offerings at Shinto shrines or Buddhist temples during the Edo period by members of all social classes.

The Sangaku were painted in color on wooden tablets (ema) and hung in the precincts of Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines as offerings to the kami and buddhas, as challenges to the congregants, or as displays of the solutions to questions. Many of these tablets were lost during the period of modernization that followed the Edo period, but around nine hundred are known to remain.

Fujita Kagen (1765–1821), a Japanese mathematician of prominence, published the first collection of sangaku problems, his Shimpeki Sampo (Mathematical problems Suspended from the Temple) in 1790, and in 1806 a sequel, the Zoku Shimpeki Sampo.

During this period Japan applied strict regulations to commerce and foreign relations for western countries so the tablets were created using Japanese mathematics, (wasan), developed in parallel to western mathematics. For example, the connection between an integral and its derivative (the fundamental theorem of calculus) was unknown, so Sangaku problems on areas and volumes were solved by expansions in infinite series and term-by-term calculation.

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Fiction cross-reference

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