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  2. John R. Hendricks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_R._Hendricks

    He later was the first to publish diagrams of all 58 magic tesseracts of order 3. [2] Hendricks was also an authority on the design of inlaid magic squares and cubes (and in 1999, a magic tesseract). Following his retirement, he gave many public lectures on magic squares and cubes in schools and in-service teacher's conventions in Canada and ...

  3. Lee Sallows - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Sallows

    Sallows is an expert on the theory of magic squares [1] and has invented several variations on them, including alphamagic squares [2] [3] and geomagic squares. [4] The latter invention caught the attention of mathematician Peter Cameron who has said that he believes that "an even deeper structure may lie hidden beyond geomagic squares" [5]

  4. D. R. Kaprekar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D._R._Kaprekar

    He also constructed certain types of magic squares related to the Copernicus magic square. [5] Initially his ideas were not taken seriously by Indian mathematicians, and his results were published largely in low-level mathematics journals or privately published, but international fame arrived when Martin Gardner wrote about Kaprekar in his ...

  5. Magic square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_square

    Bordered magic square when it is a magic square and it remains magic when the rows and columns on the outer edge are removed. They are also called concentric bordered magic squares if removing a border of a square successively gives another smaller bordered magic square. Bordered magic square do not exist for order 4.

  6. Geometric magic square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_magic_square

    A geometric magic square, often abbreviated to geomagic square, is a generalization of magic squares invented by Lee Sallows in 2001. [1] A traditional magic square is a square array of numbers (almost always positive integers ) whose sum taken in any row, any column, or in either diagonal is the same target number .

  7. Bernard Frénicle de Bessy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Frénicle_de_Bessy

    Bernard Frénicle de Bessy (c. 1604 – 1674), was a French mathematician born in Paris, who wrote numerous mathematical papers, mainly in number theory and combinatorics.He is best remembered for Des quarrez ou tables magiques, a treatise on magic squares published posthumously in 1693, in which he described all 880 essentially different normal magic squares of order 4.

  8. Muhammad ibn Muhammad al-Fulani al-Kishnawi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_ibn_Muhammad_al...

    Al-Kishnawi studied at the Gobarau Minaret in Katsina before leaving for Cairo, Egypt in 1732, where he published in Arabic a work titled, "A Treatise on the Magical Use of the Letters of the Alphabet" which is a mathematical scholarly manuscript of procedures for constructing magic squares up to the order 11. [3]

  9. Thomas Gerald Room - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Gerald_Room

    Thomas Room was born on 10 November 1902, near London, England.He studied mathematics in St John's College, Cambridge, and was a wrangler in 1923. He continued at Cambridge as a graduate student, and was elected as a fellow in 1925, but instead took a position at the University of Liverpool.