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"A Person should not go to sleep until the
debits equals the credits!"
- Luca Pacioli, Father of Accounting
(1446-1517)
In 1994, accountants from around the
world gathered in an Italian village called San Sepulcro to
celebrate the 500th anniversary of the first book written on
double-entry accounting. The book was written by an Italian friar,
Luca Pacioli.
The first accounting book actually was
one of five sections in Pacioli's mathematics book titled
"Everything about Arithmetic, Geometry, and Proportions." This
section on accounting served as the world's only accounting textbook
until well into the 16th century.
Because
Pacioli was a Franciscan friar, he might be referred to simply as
Friar Luca. While Friar Luca is often called the "Father of
Accounting," he did not invent the system. Instead, he simply
described a method used by merchants in Venice during the Italian
Renaissance period. His system included most of the accounting cycle
as we know it today.
For example,
he described the use journals and ledgers, and he warned that a
person should not go to sleep at night until the debits equalled the
credits! His ledger included assets (including receivables and
inventories), liabilities, capital, income, and expense accounts.
Friar Luca demonstrated year-end closing entries and proposed that a
trial balance be used to prove a balanced ledger. Also, his treatise
alludes to a wide range of topics from accounting ethics to cost
accounting.
Pacioli was
about 49 years old in 1494 - just two years after Columbus
discovered America - when he returned to Venice for the publication
of his fifth book, Summa de Arithmetica, Geometria, Proportioni et
Proportionalita (Everything About Arithmetic, Geometry and
Proportion). It was written as a digest and guide to existing
mathematical knowledge, and bookkeeping was only one of five topics
covered. The Summa's 36 short chapters on bookkeeping, entitled De
Computis et Scripturis (Of Reckonings and Writings) were added "in
order that the subjects of the most gracious Duke of Urbino may have
complete instructions in the conduct of business," and to "give the
trader without delay information as to his assets and liabilities"
(All quotes from the translation by J.B. Geijsbeek, Ancient Double
Entry Bookkeeping: Lucas Pacioli's Treatise, 1914).
Numerous tiny
details of bookkeeping technique set forth by Pacioli were followed
in texts and the profession for at least the next four centuries, as
accounting historian Henry Rand Hatfield put it, "persisting like
buttons on our coat sleeves, long after their significance had
disappeared." Perhaps the best proof that Pacioli's work was
considered potentially significant even at the time of publication
was the very fact that it was printed on November 10, 1494.
Guttenberg had just a quarter-century earlier invented metal type,
and it was still an extremely expensive proposition to print a book.
Accounting
practitioners in public accounting, industry, and not-for-profit
organizations, as well as investors, lending institutions, business
firms, and all other users for financial information are indebted to
Luca Pacioli for his monumental role in the development of
accounting.
This Accounting Trivia is provided by the Accounting
Troubleshooters Group
- helping you make sense of business.
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