The beauty of a dissection depends on several parameters. However, it is usual to search for solutions with the minimum number of parts. Far from being minimal, the square trisection proposed by Abu'l-Wafa' uses 9 pieces. In the 14th centuryAbu Bakr al-Khalil gave two solutions, one of which uses 8 pieces. In the late 17th centuryJacques Ozanam came back to this issue and in the 19th century, solutions using 8 and 7 pieces were found, including one given by the mathematician Édouard Lucas. In 1891 Henry Perigal published the first known solution with only 6 pieces . Nowadays, new dissections are still found and the conjecture that 6 is the minimal number of necessary pieces remains unproved.