MAGIC SQUARES OF TWO DEGREES

While reading a French mathematical work I happened to come across, the following statement: "A very remarkable magic square of `8`, in two degrees, has been constructed by M. Pfeffermann. In other words, he has managed to dispose the sixty-four first numbers on the squares of a chessboard in such a way that the sum of the numbers in every line, every column, and in each of the two diagonals, shall be the same; and more, that if one substitutes for all the numbers their squares, the square still remains magic." I at once set to work to solve this problem, and, although it proved a very hard nut, one was rewarded by the discovery of some curious and beautiful laws that govern it. The reader may like to try his hand at the puzzle.


Topics:
Number Theory -> Prime Numbers Combinatorics -> Number Tables
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