![]() Shute, The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus : an ancient Egyptian text (BM press 1987) Ī. Most scholars believe this refers to year 11 of the Theban ruler Ahmose, which would add to the evidence that Ahmose did not campaign against the Hyksos rulers until the middle or later parts of his reign (Strudwick N 2006). The late Second Intermediate Period context suggests this may refer to conflict between the Egyptians and the Hyksos before the beginning of the New Kingdom. The other side of the papyrus mentions 'year 11' without a king's name, but with a reference to the capture of the city of Heliopolis. The papyrus is extremely important as a historical document, since the scribe, Ahmose, dated it in year 33 of Apophis, the penultimate king of the Hyksos Fifteenth Dynasty. The text includes eighty-four problems: tables of divisions, multiplications, and handling of fractions geometry, including volumes and areas and miscellaneous problems. The papyrus is probably a mathematics textbook, used by scribes (the principal literate section of the populace) to learn to solve particular mathematical problems by writing down appropriate examples. Smith also acquired a surgical papyrus of about the same date as the Rhind Papyrus, suggesting that these two documents could have come from a cache of early New Kingdom manuscripts. Fragments which partly fill this gap were identified in 1922, in the collection of the New York Historical Society, which had acquired them from Edwin Smith. The two sections in the British Museum were linked by a now missing section about 18 cm long the original may have been cut in half by modern robbers to increase its sale value. Budge's original introduction to the facsimile of the papyrus indicates that these fragments were found in a chamber of a ruined building near the Ramesseum. The best-known and longest is the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus, acquired by the Scottish lawyer A.H. Several documents have survived that yield some insights into the ancient Egyptians' approach to mathematics. Curator's comments For the second section of the papyrus see: EA 10058 1865,0218.3
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