Find Famous People Fast!

Browse by Name:

Euclid

Mathematician

Euclid was a mathematician whose third century B.C. textbook Elements served as the western world's unchallenged standard for two millennia. Nothing is known about Euclid's life or physical appearance, and what little is known about his career comes from inferences in later sources. It is generally agreed that he taught geometry in Hellenistic Egypt, at Alexandria during the reign of Ptolemy I, between 305 and 285 B.C. He is credited with the thirteen volumes of Elements, a work that accumulated mathematical knowledge and codified it into a deductive system of proofs. Euclidean geometry was the geometry until the 19th century, when mathematicians began to challenge Euclid's assumptions about parallel lines when considering measurements over very large distances of, say, billions of light years.

Other mathematicians include Archimedes, Pythagoras and Galileo.

Four Good Links

Euclid's Elements

The text of his most famous work

Euclid of Alexandria

Biography, explanations and more online resources

Non-Euclidean Geometries

Much more on what Euclid did and didn't cover

Biography of Euclid

Summary of his works and bibliography

Vital Stats

Birth

ca. 325 B.C.

Birthplace

Death

ca. 265 B.C.
(age 60)

Best Known As

Alexandrian mathematician and father of geometry

Something in Common with Euclid