Astrolabes from Medieval Europe / David A. King
Signatura | Copia | Colección |
---|---|---|
433/32 | 5776 | Libros modernos desde 1900 |
Preface
Part I: General: Astronomical instruments between East and West.
Part II: The Earliest European Astrolabe: The earliest known European astrolabe in the light of other early astrolabes.
Part III: An Astrolabe Featuring a Remarkable Number Notation: Rewriting history through instruments: the secrets of a medieval astrolabe from Picardy.
Part IV: More Individual European Astrolabes: The medieval Catalan astrolabe of the Society of Antiquaries, London (co-authored with Kurt Maier)
Part V: A remarkable Italian astrolabe from ca. 1300 – witness to an ingenious tradition of non-standard astrolabes
Part VI: An astrolabe from Einbeck datable ca. 1330.
Part VII: Astrolabe Stars: The star-names on three 14th-century astrolabes from Spain, France and Italy.
Part VIII: Universal Horary Devices: A vetustissimus Arabic text on the quadrans vetus
Part IX: 14th-century England or 9th-century Baghdad? New insights on the elusive astronomical instrument called the Navicula de Venetiis.
Part X: Two Renaissance Astrolabes: The astrolabe depicted in the intarsia of the studiolo of Archduke Frederico in Urbino
Part XI: The astrolabe presented by Regiomontanus to Cardinal Bessarion in 1462 (co-authored with Gerard L'E. Turner).
Part XII: An Aid to Future Research: An ordered list of European astrolabes up to ca. 1500
Index.
Localización permanente | Código de barras | Signatura | |
---|---|---|---|
Fundación Juanelo Turriano | 5776 | 433/32 |
Preface
Part I: General: Astronomical instruments between East and West.
Part II: The Earliest European Astrolabe: The earliest known European astrolabe in the light of other early astrolabes.
Part III: An Astrolabe Featuring a Remarkable Number Notation: Rewriting history through instruments: the secrets of a medieval astrolabe from Picardy.
Part IV: More Individual European Astrolabes: The medieval Catalan astrolabe of the Society of Antiquaries, London (co-authored with Kurt Maier)
Part V: A remarkable Italian astrolabe from ca. 1300 – witness to an ingenious tradition of non-standard astrolabes
Part VI: An astrolabe from Einbeck datable ca. 1330.
Part VII: Astrolabe Stars: The star-names on three 14th-century astrolabes from Spain, France and Italy.
Part VIII: Universal Horary Devices: A vetustissimus Arabic text on the quadrans vetus
Part IX: 14th-century England or 9th-century Baghdad? New insights on the elusive astronomical instrument called the Navicula de Venetiis.
Part X: Two Renaissance Astrolabes: The astrolabe depicted in the intarsia of the studiolo of Archduke Frederico in Urbino
Part XI: The astrolabe presented by Regiomontanus to Cardinal Bessarion in 1462 (co-authored with Gerard L'E. Turner).
Part XII: An Aid to Future Research: An ordered list of European astrolabes up to ca. 1500
Index.