, credited with compiling the first
trigonometric table, has been described as "the
father of trigonometry".
Sumerian astronomers studied angle measure, using a division of circles into 360 degrees. They, and later the
Babylonians, studied the ratios of the sides of
similar triangles and discovered some properties of these ratios but did not turn that into a systematic method for finding sides and angles of triangles. The
ancient Nubians used a similar method. In the 3rd century BC,
Hellenistic mathematicians such as
Euclid and
Archimedes studied the properties of
chords and
inscribed angles in circles, and they proved theorems that are equivalent to modern trigonometric formulae, although they presented them geometrically rather than algebraically. In 140 BC,
Hipparchus (from
Nicaea, Asia Minor) gave the first tables of chords, analogous to modern
tables of sine values, and used them to solve problems in trigonometry and
spherical trigonometry. In the 2nd century AD, the Greco-Egyptian astronomer
Ptolemy (from Alexandria, Egypt) constructed detailed trigonometric tables (
Ptolemy's table of chords) in Book 1, chapter 11 of his
Almagest. Ptolemy used
chord length to define his trigonometric functions, a minor difference from the
sine convention we use today. (The value we call sin(θ) can be found by looking up the chord length for twice the angle of interest (2θ) in Ptolemy's table, and then dividing that value by two.) Centuries passed before more detailed tables were produced, and Ptolemy's treatise remained in use for performing trigonometric calculations in astronomy throughout the next 1200 years in the medieval
Byzantine,
Islamic, and, later, Western European worlds. The modern definition of the sine is first attested in the
Surya Siddhanta, and its properties were further documented in the 5th century (AD) by
Indian mathematician and astronomer
Aryabhata. These Greek and Indian works were translated and expanded by
medieval Islamic mathematicians. In 830 AD, Persian mathematician
Habash al-Hasib al-Marwazi produced the first table of cotangents. The
Persian polymath Nasir al-Din al-Tusi has been described as the creator of trigonometry as a mathematical discipline in its own right. He was the first to treat trigonometry as a mathematical discipline independent from astronomy, and he developed spherical trigonometry into its present form. He listed the six distinct cases of a right-angled triangle in spherical trigonometry, and in his
On the Sector Figure, he stated the law of sines for plane and spherical triangles, discovered the
law of tangents for spherical triangles, and provided proofs for both these laws. Knowledge of trigonometric functions and methods reached
Western Europe via
Latin translations of Ptolemy's Greek
Almagest as well as the works of
Persian and Arab astronomers such as
Al Battani and
Nasir al-Din al-Tusi. One of the earliest works on trigonometry by a northern European mathematician is
De Triangulis by the 15th century German mathematician
Regiomontanus, who was encouraged to write, and provided with a copy of the
Almagest, by the
Byzantine Greek scholar cardinal
Basilios Bessarion with whom he lived for several years. At the same time, another translation of the
Almagest from Greek into Latin was completed by the Cretan
George of Trebizond. Trigonometry was still so little known in 16th-century northern Europe that
Nicolaus Copernicus devoted two chapters of
De revolutionibus orbium coelestium to explain its basic concepts. Driven by the demands of
navigation and the growing need for accurate maps of large geographic areas, trigonometry grew into a major branch of mathematics.
Bartholomaeus Pitiscus was the first to use the word, publishing his
Trigonometria in 1595.
Gemma Frisius described for the first time the method of
triangulation still used today in surveying. It was
Leonhard Euler who fully incorporated
complex numbers into trigonometry. The works of the Scottish mathematicians
James Gregory in the 17th century and
Colin Maclaurin in the 18th century were influential in the development of
trigonometric series. Also in the 18th century,
Brook Taylor defined the general
Taylor series. == Trigonometric ratios ==