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El. knyga: Illustrating the Phaenomena: Celestial Cartography in Antiquity and the Middle Ages [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

(Independent scholar)
  • Formatas: 478 pages, 170 b/w illustrations, 16pp colour plates
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Oct-2012
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199609697
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Kaina nežinoma
  • Formatas: 478 pages, 170 b/w illustrations, 16pp colour plates
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Oct-2012
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199609697
The introduction of the moving sphere as a model for understanding the celestial phenomena caused a great breakthrough in scientific thinking about the structure of the world. It provided the momentum for making celestial globes and mapping the stars. Celestial globes were produced first by Greek astronomers, and soon became greatly appreciated in antiquity as decorative objects (3 antique globes). The design and construction of the globe varied greatly as it passed through the Arabic (10 scientific globes made before 1500) and Medieval European cultures (3 scientific globes made before 1500). It was the starting-point for the design of many maps in antiquity and later in the Middle Ages (33) serving to illustrate books such as Aratus's Phaenomena. In the early fifteenth century scientific celestial maps (5) were constructed in their own right, independent of globes.

In this book all extant celestial maps and globes made before 1500 are described and analysed in detail. This prestigious study will appeal to academic historians of science and astronomy, and art historians alike.
1 Preliminaries
1(48)
1.1 The descriptive tradition
1(4)
1.2 The geometry of the cosmos
5(5)
1.3 The mathematical tradition
10(4)
1.4 Signs, conventions, precession, and epochal modes
14(12)
1.5 Prerequisites to globe making
26(8)
1.6 Hipparchus's rule
34(15)
Appendix 1.1 Summary of the ancient constellations
38(3)
Appendix 1.2 On sources
41(3)
Appendix 1.3 Locating colures with respect to stars
44(5)
2 Celestial cartography in antiquity
49(67)
2.1 The Berlin fragment
52(2)
2.2 The Larissa globe
54(3)
2.3 Kugel's globe
57(12)
2.4 The Mainz globe
69(11)
2.5 Hyginus's globe
80(4)
2.6 The Farnese globe
84(32)
Appendix 2.1 Catalogue of antique celestial globes
102(14)
3 The descriptive tradition in the Middle Ages
116(141)
3.1 Summer and winter hemispheres
118(24)
3.2 Planispheres
142(38)
3.3 Northern and southern hemispheres
180(12)
3.4 Globe making in the Middle Ages
192(65)
Appendix 3.1 Catalogue of medieval hemispheres
207(20)
Appendix 3.2 Catalogue of medieval planispheres
227(22)
Appendix 3.3 Northern and southern medieval hemispheres
249(5)
Appendix 3.4 Medieval pictures of globes
254(3)
4 Islamic celestial cartography
257(80)
4.1 The celestial ceiling of Qusayr Amra
260(18)
4.2 The Islamic mathematical tradition
278(8)
4.3 The Uranography of Abdul-Husayn al-Sufi (903--86)
286(21)
4.4 Extant globes made before 1500
307(30)
Appendix 4.1 Islamic globes with constellation images made before 1500
323(14)
5 The mathematical tradition in medieval Europe
337(95)
5.1 The mathematical tradition: the Islamic legacy
337(6)
5.2 Ptolemy's precession globe
343(14)
5.3 Maps in the mathematical tradition
357(31)
5.4 Globes in the service of astrology
388(44)
Appendix 5.1 European celestial maps made before 1500
408(12)
Appendix 5.2 European celestial globes made before 1500
420(12)
Epilogue 432(5)
Bibliography 437(22)
Addendum 459(4)
Manuscript Index 463(2)
Author Index 465
Elly Dekker is an independent scholar studying the history of astronomy and of scientific instruments. She was awarded the Sackler Fellowship and the Caird medal for cataloguing the collection of globes and armillary spheres of the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich.