The monks’ studies in the monastery also included in-depth study of the liberal arts of the quadrivium, namely arithmetic and geometry, music and astronomy. These studies served not only to learn about the world, but also provided a means of helping monks to overcome the limitations of the senses and arrive at a deeper understanding of reality.
Mathematics, in particular, which had long been neglected, re-emerged in the Middle Ages.
Among the manuscripts preserved at Montecassino, Cod. 189 occupies a significant place. It is a study book that collects texts on mathematics and calculation for school use, such as Boethius’ De institutione arithmetica, Gerbert of Aurillac’s Regulae de numerorum abaci rationibus, various passages from Isidore’s Etymologies, and the first chapter of Bede’s De temporum ratione.