A function is said to be doubly periodic if it has two periods and whose ratio is not real. A doubly periodic function that is analytic (except at poles) and that has no singularities other than poles in the finite part of the plane is called an elliptic function (Whittaker and Watson 1990, p. 429). The periods and play the same part in the theory of elliptic functions as does the single period in the case of the trigonometric functions.
Jacobi (1835) proved that if a univariate single-valued function is doubly periodic, then the ratio of periods cannot be real, as well as the impossibility for a single-valued univariate function to have more than two distinct periods (Boyer and Merzbach 1991, p. 525).