Mayan mathematics
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Hernán Cortés, excited by stories of the lands which Columbus had 
recently discovered, sailed from Spain in 1505 landing in Hispaniola 
which is now Santo Domingo. After farming there for some years he sailed
 with Velázquez to conquer Cuba in 1511. He was twice elected major of 
Santiago then, on 18 February 1519,  he sailed for the coast of Yucatán 
with a force of 11 ships, 508 soldiers, 100 sailors, and 16 horses. He 
landed at Tabasco on the northern coast of the Yucatán peninsular. He 
met with little resistance from the local population and they presented 
him with presents including twenty girls. He married Malinche, one of 
these girls. 
 
The people of the Yucatán peninsular were descendants of the ancient 
Mayan civilisation which had been in decline from about 900 AD. It is 
the mathematical achievements of this civilisation which we are 
concerned with in this article. However, before describing these, we 
should note that Cortés went on to conquer the Aztec peoples of Mexico. 
He captured Tenochtitlán before the end of 1519 (the city was rebuilt as
 Mexico City in 1521) and the Aztec empire fell to Cortés before the end
 of 1521. Malinche, who acted as interpreter for Cortés, played an 
important role in his ventures.
In order to understand how knowledge of the Mayan people has reached us 
we must consider another Spanish character in this story, namely Diego 
de Landa. He joined the Franciscan Order in 1541 when about 17 years old
 and requested that he be sent to the New World as a missionary. Landa 
helped the Mayan peoples in the Yucatán peninsular and generally tried 
his best to protect them from their new Spanish masters. He visited the 
ruins of the great cities of the Mayan civilisation and learnt from the 
people about their customs and history.
However, despite being sympathetic to the Mayan people, Landa abhorred 
their religious practices. To the devote Christian that Landa was, the 
Mayan religion with its icons and the Mayan texts written in 
hieroglyphics appeared like the work of the devil. He ordered all Mayan 
idols be destroyed and all Mayan books be burned. Landa seems to have 
been surprised at the distress this caused the Mayans.
Nobody can quite understand Landa's feelings but perhaps he regretted 
his actions or perhaps he tried to justify them. Certainly what he then 
did was to write a book Relación de las cosas de Yucatán  (1566) 
which describes the hieroglyphics, customs, temples, religious practices
 and history of the Mayans which his own actions had done so much to 
eradicate. The book was lost for many years but rediscovered in Madrid 
three hundred years later in 1869. 
A small number of Mayan documents survived destruction by Landa. The 
most important are: the Dresden Codex now kept in the Sächsische 
Landesbibliothek Dresden; the Madrid Codex now kept in the American 
Museum in Madrid; and the Paris Codex now in the Bibliothèque nationale 
in Paris. The Dresden Codex is a treatise on astronomy, thought to have 
been copied in the eleventh century AD from an original document dating 
from the seventh or eighth centuries AD.
The Dresden codex:
Knowledge of the Mayan civilisation has been greatly increased in the last thirty years (see for example [3] and [8]).
 Modern techniques such as high resolution radar images, aerial 
photography and satellite images have changed conceptions of the Maya 
civilisation. We are interested in the Classic Period of the Maya which 
spans the period 250 AD to 900 AD, but this classic period was built on 
top of a civilisation which had lived in the region from about 2000 BC. 
The Maya of the Classic Period built large cities, around fifteen have 
been identified in the Yucatán peninsular, with recent estimates of the 
population of the city of Tikal in the Southern Lowlands being around 
50000 at its peak. Tikal is probably the largest of the cities and 
recent studies have identified about 3000 separate constructions 
including temples, palaces, shrines, wood and thatch houses, terraces, 
causeways, plazas and huge reservoirs for storing rainwater. The rulers 
were astronomer priests who lived in the cities who controlled the 
people with their religious instructions. Farming with sophisticated 
raised fields and irrigation systems provided the food to support the 
population.
A common culture, calendar, and mythology held the civilisation together
 and astronomy played an important part in the religion which underlay 
the whole life of the people. Of course astronomy and calendar 
calculations require mathematics and indeed the Maya constructed a very 
sophisticated number system. We do not know the date of these 
mathematical achievements but it seems certain that when the system was 
devised it contained features which were more advanced than any other in
 the world at the time.
 
The Maya number system was a base twenty system. 
Here are the Mayan numerals.
Almost certainly the reason for base 20 arose from ancient people who 
counted on both their fingers and their toes. Although it was a base 20 
system, called a vigesimal system, one can see how five plays a major 
role, again clearly relating to five fingers and toes. In fact it is 
worth noting that although the system is base 20 it only has three 
number symbols (perhaps the unit symbol arising from a pebble and the 
line symbol from a stick used in counting). Often people say how 
impossible it would be to have a number system to a large base since it 
would involve remembering so many special symbols. This shows how people
 are conditioned by the system they use and can only see variants of the
 number system in close analogy with the one with which they are 
familiar. Surprising and advanced features of the Mayan number system 
are the zero, denoted by a shell for reasons we cannot explain, and the 
positional nature of the system. However, the system was not a truly 
positional system as we shall now explain. 
In a true base twenty system the first number would denote the number of
 units up to 19, the next would denote the number of 20's up to 19, the 
next the number of 400's up to 19, etc. However although the Maya number
 system starts this way with the units up to 19 and the 20's up to 19, 
it changes in the third place and this denotes the number of 360's up to
 19 instead of the number of 400's. After this the system reverts to 
multiples of 20 so the fourth place is the number of 18 × 202, the next the number of 18 × 203 and so on. For example [ 8;14;3;1;12 ] represents
12 + 1 × 20 + 3 × 18 × 20 + 14 × 18 × 202 + 8 × 18 × 203 = 1253912.
As a second example [ 9;8;9;13;0 ] represents
0 + 13 × 20 + 9 × 18 × 20 + 8 × 18 × 202 + 9 × 18 × 203 =1357100.
Both these examples are found in the ruins of Mayan towns and we shall explain their significance below.
Now the system we have just described is used in the Dresden Codex and 
it is the only system for which we have any written evidence. In [4]
 Ifrah argues that the number system we have just introduced was the 
system of the Mayan priests and astronomers which they used for 
astronomical and calendar calculations. This is undoubtedly the case and
 that it was used in this way explains some of the irregularities in the
 system as we shall see below. It was the system used for calendars. 
However Ifrah also argues for a second truly base 20 system which would 
have been used by the merchants and was the number system which would 
also have been used in speech. This, he claims had a circle or dot 
(coming from a cocoa bean currency according to some, or a pebble used 
for counting according to others) as its unity, a horizontal bar for 5 
and special symbols for 20, 400, 8000 etc. Ifrah writes [4]:-
Even though no trace of it remains, we can reasonably assume that the Maya had a number system of this kind, and that intermediate numbers were figured by repeating the signs as many times as was needed.
Let us say a little about the Maya calendar before returning to their 
number systems, for the calendar was behind the structure of the number 
system. Of course, there was also an influence in the other direction, 
and the base of the number system 20 played a major role in the 
structure of the calendar.
The Maya had two calendars. One of these was a ritual calendar, known as
 the Tzolkin, composed of 260 days. It contained 13 "months" of 20 days 
each, the months being named after 13 gods while the twenty days were 
numbered from 0 to 19. The second calendar was a 365-day civil calendar 
called the Haab. This calendar consisted of 18 months, named after 
agricultural or religious events, each with 20 days (again numbered 0 to
 19) and a short "month" of only 5 days that was called the Wayeb. The 
Wayeb was considered an unlucky period and Landa wrote in his classic 
text that the Maya did not wash, comb their hair or do any hard work 
during these five days. Anyone born during these days would have bad 
luck and remain poor and unhappy all their lives.
Why then was the ritual calendar based on 260 days? This is a question 
to which we have no satisfactory answer. One suggestion is that since 
the Maya lived in the tropics the sun was directly overhead twice every 
year. Perhaps they measured 260 days and 105 days as the successive 
periods between the sun being directly overhead (the fact that this is 
true for the Yucatán peninsular cannot be taken to prove this theory). A
 second theory is that the Maya had 13 gods of the "upper world", and 20
 was the number of a man, so giving each god a 20 day month gave a 
ritual calendar of 260 days.
At any rate having two calendars, one with 260 days and the other with 
365 days, meant that the two would calendars would return to the same 
cycle after lcm(260, 365) = 18980 days. Now this is after 52 civil years
 (or 73 ritual years) and indeed the Maya had a sacred cycle consisting 
of 52 years. Another major player in the calendar was the planet Venus. 
The Mayan astronomers calculated its synodic period (after which it has 
returned to the same position) as 584 days. Now after only two of the 52
 years cycles Venus will have made 65 revolutions and also be back to 
the same position. This remarkable coincidence would have meant great 
celebrations by the Maya every 104 years.
Now there was a third way that the Mayan people had of measuring time 
which was not strictly a calendar. It was an absolute timescale which 
was based on a creation date and time was measured forward from this. 
What date was the Mayan creation date? The date most often taken is 12 
August 3113 BC but we should say straightaway that not all historians 
agree that this was the zero of this so-called "Long Count". Now one 
might expect that this measurement of time would either give the number 
of ritual calendar years since creation or the number of civil calendar 
years since creation. However it does neither. 
The Long Count is based on a year of 360 days, or perhaps it is more 
accurate to say that it is just a count of days with then numbers 
represented in the Mayan number system. Now we see the probable reason 
for the departure of the number system from a true base 20 system. It 
was so that the system approximately represented years. Many 
inscriptions are found in the Mayan towns which give the date of 
erection in terms of this long count. Consider the two examples of Mayan
 numbers given above. The first
[ 8;14;3;1;12 ]
is the date given on a plate which came from the town of Tikal. It translates to
12 + 1 × 20 + 3 × 18 × 20 + 14 × 18 × 202 + 8 × 18 × 203
which is 1253912 days from the creation date of 12 August 3113 BC so the plate was carved in 320 AD.
The second example
[ 9;8;9;13;0 ]
is the completion date on a building in Palenque in Tabasco, near the landing site of Cortés. It translates to
0 + 13 × 20 + 9 × 18 × 20 + 8 × 18 × 202 + 9 × 18 × 203
which is 1357100 days from the creation date of 12 August 3113 BC so the building was completed in 603 AD.
We should note some properties (or more strictly non-properties) of the 
Mayan number system. The Mayans appear to have had no concept of a 
fraction but, as we shall see below, they were still able to make 
remarkably accurate astronomical measurements. Also since the Mayan 
numbers were not a true positional base 20 system, it fails to have the 
nice mathematical properties that we expect of a positional system. For 
example
[ 9;8;9;13;0 ] = 0 + 13 × 20 + 9 × 18 × 20 + 8 × 18 × 202 + 9 × 18 × 203 = 1357100
yet
[ 9;8;9;13 ] = 13 + 9 × 20 + 8 × 18 × 20 + 9 × 18 × 202 = 67873.
Moving all the numbers one place left would multiply the number by 20 in
 a true base 20 positional system yet 20 × 67873 = 1357460 which is not 
equal to 1357100. For when we multiple [ 9;8;9;13 ] by 20 we get 9 × 400
 where in [ 9;8;9;13;0 ] we have 9 × 360.
We should also note that the Mayans almost certainly did not have 
methods of multiplication for their numbers and definitely did not use 
division of numbers. Yet the Mayan number system is certainly capable of
 being used for the operations of multiplication and division as the 
authors of [15] demonstrate.
Finally we should say a little about the Mayan advances in astronomy. Rodriguez writes in [19]:-
The Mayan concern for understanding the cycles of celestial bodies, particularly the Sun, the Moon and Venus, led them to accumulate a large set of highly accurate observations. An important aspect of their cosmology was the search for major cycles, in which the position of several objects repeated.
The Mayans carried out astronomical measurements with remarkable 
accuracy yet they had no instruments other than sticks. They used two 
sticks in the form of a cross, viewing astronomical objects through the 
right angle formed by the sticks. The Caracol building in Chichén Itza 
is thought by many to be a Mayan observatory. Many of the windows of the
 building are positioned to line up with significant lines of sight such
 as that of the setting sun on the spring equinox of 21 March and also 
certain lines of sight relating to the moon.
The Caracol building in Chichén Itza:
With such crude instruments the Maya were able to calculate the length 
of the year to be 365.242 days (the modern value is 365.242198 days). 
Two further remarkable calculations are of the length of the lunar 
month. At Copán (now on the border between Honduras and Guatemala) the 
Mayan astronomers found that 149 lunar months lasted 4400 days. This 
gives 29.5302 days as the length of the lunar month. At Palenque in 
Tabasco they calculated that 81 lunar months lasted 2392 days. This 
gives 29.5308 days as the length of the lunar month. The modern value is
 29.53059 days. Was this not a remarkable achievement?
There are, however, very few other mathematical achievements of the Maya. Groemer [14]
 describes seven types of frieze ornaments occurring on Mayan buildings 
from the period 600 AD to 900 AD in the Puuc region of the Yucatán. This
 area includes the ruins at Kabah and Labna. Groemer gives twenty-five 
illustrations of friezes which show Mayan inventiveness and geometric 
intuition in such architectural decorations.
References (26 books/articles)
Other Web sites:- Kevin Brown (Mayan numeration)
 
- Rhonda Robinson (Mayan numbers)
 
- Mayan World Study Center (Mayan Mathematics)
 
- Mayan World Study Center (The Mayan calendar)
 
- Michiel Berger (Mayan Astronomy)
 
- B and V Böhm(The Dresden codex)
 
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Mayan_mathematics.html
 
 
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