Sulbasutras
Some scholars have shown on the basis of evidence in Shatapatha Brahmana that Indian geometry predates Greek geometry by centuries. It has been argued that Geometry and Mathematics had a ritualistic beginning in India centuries before Greeks or Babylon. In these rituals, Earth was represented by Circular altar and heavens were represented in Square altar. There were eagle shaped altars also. The examples are as follows:
The Ritual consisted of converting the Circle into a square of identical area. As per a paper by Seidenberg: Babylonia [1700 BC] got the theorem of Pythagoras from India or that both Old-Babylonia and India got it from a third source. The source quoted was Sulvasutras.
Sulvasutras deal with complex fire altars of various shapes constructed with bricks of specific shapes and area: the total area of the altar must always be carefully respected. This proves that despite of no existence of algebra, there was an awareness of precise purely geometrical calculations.
Seidenberg’s conclusion of India being the source of the geometric and mathematical knowledge of the ancient world has been included now in chronology of the texts. Please note that
Sulva sutras belong to a bigger text Shrauta Sutras.
The four major Sulva Sutras, which are mathematically the most significant, are those composed by Baudhayana, Manava, Apastamba and Katyayana. Out of them the oldest belongs to Baudhayana and dates back to 600BC. They discuss the cases of the Pythagorean Theorem and Pythagorean triples.
The Baudhayan Sulbasutra 1.48 says: The diagonal of a rectangle produces both areas produced separately by its two sides.
It is represented as follows
In the Baudhayan’s Sulva Sutras we should note that the Right angles were made by ropes marked to give the triads 3, 4, 5 and 5, 12, 13 (32 + 42 = 52, 52 + 122 = 132) J
Sulva Sutra also mentions a ritual which included “Squaring the circle” (and vice-versa), thus geometrically constructing a square having the same area as a given area. It has worked out the square root of 2 to 1.414215, up to last 5 decimals.
rohit verma
May 17, 2015 at 10:43 amit is important to know about the Sulbasutras and other mathematical aspects related to that.while ritualistic and religious relation made it more complicated .but it is interesting and produce curiosity to know our ancient past and its relation with others like Babylonia,Greek etc.