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alKhwarizmiego

alKhwarizmiego is a nonstandard transliteration historically associated with the 9th‑century Persian mathematician Abu Abdallah Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi. In most scholarly contexts the figure is known as al-Khwarizmi, and the variant alKhwarizmiego appears in some modern texts or fictional adaptations.

Life and context: He lived circa 780–850 CE and originated from Khwarezm in the region of present-day

Contributions: His most famous work, the Book of Calculation by Al-Jabr and Al-Muqabala (Kitab al-Jabr wa-l-Muqabala),

Legacy and influence: His writings helped introduce Hindu-Arabic numerals to the Islamic world and, through Latin

Notes: The naming variant alKhwarizmiego is not a separate historical figure in standard scholarship; it reflects

Turkmenistan
and
Uzbekistan.
He
worked
in
Baghdad
at
the
House
of
Wisdom
during
the
Abbasid
Caliphate,
where
he
authored
influential
treatises
on
mathematics,
astronomy,
and
geography.
introduced
systematic
methods
for
solving
linear
and
quadratic
equations
and
helped
establish
algebra
as
a
distinct
mathematical
discipline.
He
also
contributed
to
the
use
of
Hindu-Arabic
numerals
and
to
the
transfer
of
mathematical
knowledge
between
cultures.
translations
in
Renaissance
Europe,
to
Western
mathematics.
The
Latinized
form
Algoritmi
gave
rise
to
the
term
algorithm,
and
his
algebraic
methods
influenced
later
scholars,
shaping
the
development
of
mathematics,
astronomy,
and
geography
in
the
medieval
world.
transliteration
variation
or
fictional
usage.
Distinctions
between
the
person
and
his
etymological
legacy
are
often
discussed
in
modern
philology.