In the early 1800s elements were arranged by atomic weight
Until quite recently, there were 2 obvious ways to categorise elements:
Their physical properties & chemical properties
Their atomic weight
Atomic weight is what we would call 'relative atomic mass' today
Scientists had no idea of atomic structure or of protons, neutrons or electrons, so there was no such thing as atomic number to them
It was only in the 20th century after protons and electrons were discovered that it was realised the elements were best arranged in order of atomic number
Back then, the only thing they could measure was atomic weight, and so the known elements were arranged in order of atomic weight
When the elements were arranged in order of atomic weight, a periodic pattern was noticed in the properties of the elements. This is where the name 'periodic table' comes from
Early periodic tables were not complete and some elements were placed in the wrong group because they were arranged in order of atomic weight and their properties were not taken into account
Dmitri Mendeleev left gaps and predicted new elements
In 1869, Dmitri Mendeleev overcame some of the problems of early periodic tables by taking 50 known elements and arranging them into his Table of Elements - with various gaps as shown
Mendeleev put the elements mainly in order of atomic weight but did switch that order if the properties meant it should be changed
Gaps were left in the table to make sure that elements with similar properties stayed in the same groups
Some of these gaps indicated the existence of undiscovered elements and allowed Mendeleev to predict what their properties might be
Mendeleev made good predictions about the chemical and physical properties of an element he called ekasilicon, which we know today as germanium
The discovery of isotopes in the early 20th century confirmed that Mendeleev was correct to not place elements in a strict order of atomic weight but to also take account of their properties
Isotopes of the same element have different masses but have the same chemical properties so occupy the same position on the periodic table