The pathvvay to knowledg containing the first principles of geometrie, as they may moste aptly be applied vnto practise, bothe for vse of instrumentes geometricall, and astronomicall and also for proiection of plattes in euerye kinde, and therefore much necessary for all sortes of men.

About this Item

Title
The pathvvay to knowledg containing the first principles of geometrie, as they may moste aptly be applied vnto practise, bothe for vse of instrumentes geometricall, and astronomicall and also for proiection of plattes in euerye kinde, and therefore much necessary for all sortes of men.
Author
Record, Robert, 1510?-1558.
Publication
[Imprinted at London :: In Poules churcheyarde, at the signe of the Brasen serpent, by Reynold Wolfe. Cum priuilegio ad imprimendum solum,
Anno Domini. M.D.LI. [1551]]
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Subject terms
Geometry -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A10541.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The pathvvay to knowledg containing the first principles of geometrie, as they may moste aptly be applied vnto practise, bothe for vse of instrumentes geometricall, and astronomicall and also for proiection of plattes in euerye kinde, and therefore much necessary for all sortes of men." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A10541.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 18, 2024.

Pages

Example.

[illustration] diagram
I haue .iij. lynes. A. B. and C. D. and E. F. of whiche I put .C.D. for my ground line, then with my compas I take the length of. A. B. and set the one foote of my compas in C, and draw an arch line with the other foote. Likewaies I take the lēgth of E. F, and set one foote in D, and with the other foote I make an arch line crosse the other arche, and the pricke of their me∣tyng (whiche is G.) shall be the thirde corner of the triangle, for in all suche kyndes of woorkynge to make a tryangle, if you haue one line drawen, there remayneth nothyng els but to fynde where the pitche of the thirde corner shall bee, for two of them must needes be at the two candes of the lyne that is drawen.

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