Marie Crous

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Duchesse d'Aiguillon, who was the patron of Marie Crous and sponsored her research.

Marie Crous (fl. 1641) was a French mathematician. She introduced the decimal system to France in the 17th century.

Biography[]

Coming from a modest origin, Marie Crous became an accomplished writer and teacher at Charlotte-Rose de Caumont La Force.[1] She was first published in 1636; by 1641, she published a study on the decimal system, which she dedicated to "the saffron-tinted princess" Madame de Combalet, Duchesse d'Aiguillon, niece of Cardinal de Richelieu and a well known patron; she was a friend of Marin Mersenne. However, Marie Crous would never be cited by the eminent members of the academics and scientists within the Minim Roman Catholic religious order, who dominated scientific research in France during that period, and she was never acknowledged as a woman of learning.[2]

Her work, printed by Simon Stevin, goes well beyond what was provided at the time in calculation manuals. She wrote,

There is no book to be found other than this one where this invention is taught, being due to the vigilant work of your very humble servant.

Her work introduced two fundamental innovations: the decimal point (today called the virgule in French) to separate the mantissa of the decimal parts, as well as the use of a zero in the decimal part to indicate that a place is absent. In doing this, she gave form to current decimal numbers. She named the zeroes nuls as the Germans were doing.

Talented in writing as well as mathematics, she developed among other things the method of Pestalozzi and what she called denominational division, which has great utility for mental calculations, notably in its application in the rule of three.

Simon Stevin

Crous' work (the first edition dates to 1635–1636) begins with an epistle to her noble patron. She expresses gratitude for her help in these terms:

You know how, as in imitation of the great God, to raise the simple and lowly (of whose number I am one, I confess it ingenuously).

Nevertheless, she does not attribute the merit of her inventions to her.[2] In the preface of her Abrégé recherche (Research Abstract), Marie Crous assures that she made her work

to give solace to such young women as those who practise in this science as much for the necessity of their business as for the contentment of their spirit.

In her preface to Charlotte de Caumont, she referred to trades workers in construction in Paris, who were at that time beginning to replace pre-metric units of measurement, such as the toise, with measurements in tenths as a more efficient system:

It seems to me that it is up to the sovereigns to change the division of their money, weights and measures, because the ausneur and toiseur have marked their measurements in tenths on the side where there are no ruler markings...

From this perspective, Marie Crous provided a basis for the decimal metric system.[3]

Mathematician Olry Terquem regretted that her name had not yet been given to a street in Paris. More recently,[when?] Catherine Goldstein devoted part of her article, "Neither public nor private: mathematics in early modern France" to Crous.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Luc Capdevila, Le genre face aux mutations: masculin et féminin, du Moyen Âge à nos jours, Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2003, p.132.
  2. ^ a b (in English) Catherine Goldstein, Neither public nor private: mathematics in early modern France.
  3. ^ Jean-Pierre Poirier, Histoire des femmes de science en France: du Moyen Age à la Révolution, Pygmalion/Gérard Watelet, 2002, p.380.
Retrieved from ""