Today, the collections cover the development of the discipline from its Ancient Greek origins right up to the research published by the Savilian professors themselves.
Deriving from the ancient Greek geo, meaning earth, and metron, meaning measurement, this branch of mathematics is one of the most influential in the history of humanity. First developed in Mesopotamia and Egypt to tackle practical problems resulting from the development of agriculture and trade, it was the Ancient Greeks that revolutionised geometry, not only coining the word itself, but more importantly putting it into a logical framework for the first time.
The most important Greek geometer has to be Euclid—his statue in the Natural History Museum in Oxford is depicted to the right. Building upon earlier geometric knowledge, Euclid revolutionised the subject with the publication of his Elements, which effectively put geometry into a logical framework. Starting from clear building blocks like points and lines, he made a series of assumptions, now called axioms or postulates, which could be proved with examples. Considered to be one of the greatest works compiled by man, Euclidean geometry was extremely influential. The Euclidean tradition is still visible in Newton's Principia Mathematica and Einstein even praised Euclid over two thousand years later, writing that his assertions 'could be proved with such certainty that any doubt appeared to be out of the question. The lucidity and certainty made an indescribable impression on me.’