1. Aarsleff, H. (1989). The Berlin Academy under Frederick the Great. History of the Human Sciences, 2(2), 193–206.
2. Andersen, K. (2007). The geometry of an art: The history of the mathematical theory of perspective from Alberti to Monge. New York: Springer.
3. Barlow, P. (1814). A new mathematical and philosophical dictionary: Comprising an explanation of terms and principles of pure and mixed mathematics, and such branches of natural philosophy as are susceptible of mathematical investigation. With historical sketches of the rise, progress and present state of the several departments of these sciences, and an account of the discoveries and writings of the most celebrated authors, both ancient and modern. London: G. and S. Robinson [etc].
4. Begehr, H. G. W., Koch, H., Kramer, J., Schappacher, N., & Thiele, E.-J. (Eds.). (1998). Mathematics in Berlin. Berlin: Birkhäuser.
5. Bergin, J. (Eds.). (2001). The seventeenth century: Europe 1598–1715. Oxford: Oxford University Press. References to the Spanish translation: Bergin, J. (Ed.) (2002). El siglo XVII: Europa 1598-1715. Antonio Desmonts (Trans.). Barcelona: Crítica.