Page:The Algebra of Mohammed Ben Musa (1831).djvu/175

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Thus the master’s heirs have obtained five hundred and twenty-nine dirhems and seventeen twenty-sevenths of a dirhem less four-ninths and one-third of one-ninth of thing; and this is twice as much as the legacy, which is thing. Halve it: You have two hundred and sixty-four dirhems and twenty-two twenty-sevenths of a dirhem, less seven twenty-sevenths of thing. Reduce it by(113) means of the seven twenty-sevenths which you add to the one thing. This gives one hundred and sixty-four dirhems and twenty-two twenty-sevenths, equal to one thing and seven twenty-sevenths of thing. Make the equation, and adjust it to one single thing, by subtracting from it as much as seven thirty-fourths of the same. Then one thing is equal to two hundred and ten dirhems and five-seventeenths; and this is the legacy.

“Suppose that a man in his illness emancipates a slave, whose price is one hundred dirhems, and makes to some one a present of a slave-girl, whose price is five hundred dirhems, her dowry being one hundred dirhems, and the receiver cohabits with her.” Abu Hanifah says: The emancipation is the more important act, and must first be attended to.

Computation:[1] Take the price of the girl, which is


  1. The price of the slave-girl being ; and what she receives on being emancipated , her ransom is .
    If her dowry is , he that receives her, takes .