![Richard Sault's New Treatise of Algebra Richard Sault's title page](/sites/default/files/images/upload_library/46/Plimpton-Smith/080080137-1.jpg)
This is the title page of A New Treatise of Algebra by Richard Sault (d. 1702). Not much is known about Sault, except that he ran a mathematical school in London in the 1690s near the Royal Exchange and was an editor of and contributor to the Athenian Mercury, a literary journal that was published between 1690 and 1697. The Treatise of Algebra was published as an appendix to William Leybourne's Pleasure with Profit, and included a chapter by Joseph Raphson on converging series.
![Sault p. 1](/sites/default/files/images/upload_library/46/Plimpton-Smith/080080137-2.jpg)
On page 1, Sault describes algebra as the "art of reasoning with unknown quantities, in order to discover their habitude or relation to such as are known."
![Sault p. 19](/sites/default/files/images/upload_library/46/Plimpton-Smith/080080137-3.jpg)
On page 19, Sault describes in some detail, with an example, how to convert a word problem into algebraic notation. Note that he generalizes his problem by using arbitrary constants, instead of just the given numbers.
![Sault p. 20](/sites/default/files/images/upload_library/46/Plimpton-Smith/080080137-4.jpg)
On page 20, Sault continues his description of solving equations, giving more examples and then various questions for practice.
![Sault p. 33](/sites/default/files/images/upload_library/46/Plimpton-Smith/080080137-5.jpg)
On page 33, Sault introduces quadratic equations, showing how the solution procedure for these equations enables one to solve a problem that Clavius was unable to solve in his own treatise on algebra.
Index to Mathematical Treasures