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Astrolabes Introduction The history of the astrolabe spans many centuries and cultures. Known in some form to the ancient Greeks, astrolabes were still being produced as astronomical instruments in the nineteenth century. Over this period, many texts have been written about their construction and use. However, historians are still uncertain about the extent to which astrolabes were used for practical astronomy. Johann Stoeffler, Elucidatio fabricae (Oppenheim: Jacob Koebel, 1524), 70 ususque astrolabii Using the shadow square on an astrolabe to measure the height of a tower. Reproduced by kind permission of the Syndics of Cambridge University Library. The instrument works on a principle called stereographic projection. This allows the three dimensional celestial sphere representing the heavens to be drawn on a flat disc marked with a grid of curved lines. The movements of the Sun and stars can be traced against this grid, once their positions have been determined. Most astrolabes are equipped with sights to make the necessary observations, enabling the user to find the time of day or night. These sights can also be used to find the heights of buildings, trees and hills. To find out how an astrolabe was used in order to tell the time, see this animation by the Museum of the History of Science, Oxford, and the Science Museum, London. Although some astrolabes were made of paper and wood, few of these have survived, and it is more common to see brass and giltbrass examples. Many of these would have been very expensive, and may have been appreciated for their decorative value rather than as working instruments. Knowledge of the astrolabe was conveyed to the Latin West through Islamic Spain in the Middle Ages. The oldest European instruments date from the thirteenth century (although there is disagreement over the dating of one particular instrument which may be older). Some of the most decorative astrolabes were made during the Renaissance, as commissions for royalty and nobility, but these may never have been used for astronomy. In the seventeenth century the astrolabe gradually fell out of use as its combination of observing, predicting and time-finding functions came to be carried out by more specialised instruments. Astrology A further function of the astrolabe was to model the appearance of the heavens for times past and future, making it useful in astrology. Astrolabes may therefore have been most popular in the Latin West with medical doctors, since astrology played an important role in diagnosing illness and determining treatment. Casting a horoscope requires a knowledge of the relative positions of the Sun, Moon, stars and planets in order to draw conclusions and make predictions. One of the fundamental calculations in astrology is the position of the Sun relative to the signs of the zodiac. The apparent annual path of the Sun as seen from Earth is called the ecliptic and the astrolabe can be used to calculate the position of the Sun on this path. The ecliptic is divided into twelve equal sections, representing the signs of the zodiac; the position of the Sun on the ecliptic determines which zodiac sign it is in. The ecliptic is a feature on all astrolabe retes. With the aid of astronomical tables, an astrolabe enabled non-mathematicians to calculate positions and angles of the heavenly bodies. Those astrolabes which lack the star pointers of other instruments or carry astrological information were probably intended for astrological use. Jacob Koebel, Astrolabii Declaratio Eiusdemque Usus (Mainz: Peter Jordan, 1535), sig. D1r Exemplum for finding the beginnings of the twelve houses with an astrolabe for a given time. Reproduced by kind permission of the Syndics of Cambridge University Library. Hipparchus and Ptolemy on Astrolabes Hipparchus (fl. the second half of the second century BC) was a careful astronomical observer, who operated in a systematic fashion. He may have been responsible for the invention (or adaptation) of several astronomical instruments. Some historians of astronomy (including G. J. Toomer, John North and David King) believe that Hipparchus may have been the inventor of the planispheric astrolabe, used to tell the time at night from stellar positions. The earliest surviving description of the planispheric astrolabe is to be found in the writings of John Philoponus, who lived during the sixth century AD, long after Hipparchus. However, the mathematical theory which serves as the foundation for the stereographic projection used in the planispheric astrolabe was provided in the second century AD, by Ptolemy, in his Planispherium. Given Ptolemy's acknowledged debt to his predecessor, it is entirely possible that he was here, too, building on the work of Hipparchus. Gemma Frisius, De Astrolabo Catholico libellus (Antwerp: ex officina Arnoldi Coninx, 1584), p. 358 A visual account of projection. Reproduced by kind permission of the Syndics of Cambridge University Library. Ptolemy's Planisphaerium (as it was known in the Middle Ages) dealt with the problem of mapping figures from the celestial sphere onto a plane by a specific method that preserves circles, which is now known as 'stereographic projection'. The early interest in this technique, which is documented well before Ptolemy, may have been a desire to simplify certain problems in spherical geometry by reducing them to plane geometry. Stereographic projection later became the mathematical basis of the plane astrolabe. (It should be noted that the 'armillary astrolabe' or star-taker made of rings or bracelets described by Ptolemy in the Almagest Book 5, chapter 1, was a completely different sort of instrument). Johann Stoeffler, Elucidatio fabricae ususque astrolabii (Oppenheim: Jacob Koebel, 1524), 6 Marking out a latitude plate for an astrolabe. Reproduced by kind permission of the Syndics of Cambridge University Library. Regiomontanus and the Astrolabe During his years in Vienna, Johannes Regiomontanus (d. 1476) composed a tract on the construction and use of the astrolabe. Documentary evidence suggests that he later designed several of these instruments, including one presented to King Matthias of Hungary which is now lost. An extant astrolabe of 1462, signed ‘Johannes’ and dedicated to Cardinal Bessarion, is probably by Regiomontanus. At least eleven other ‘Regiomontanus-type’ German astrolabes of the fifteenth century, with significant similarities to the Bessarion instrument, survive, indicating a distinct tradition which Regiomontanus established or participated in. The retia of these instruments are based on an earlier Italian form, and they feature Roman lettering as well as Gothic script. Notably, Regiomontanus introduced the Roman font to Nuremberg when he established his printing press there. It is apparent that elements of the design of these astrolabes were adopted by Johannes Stöffler (1452-1531), the first Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy at Tübingen University, and Georg Hartmann (1489-1564), the leading Nuremberg instrument-maker of the early-sixteenth century. The Bessarion astrolabe, and several others in the same tradition, have on the reverse an organum Ptolemei: a projection valid at any latitude for determining the time in equinoctial hours from the altitude of the Sun for any latitude. This projection, with the addition of stellar positions, is the basis of the form of universal astrolabe commonly (but for this reason misleadingly) called the Rojas-type, after a publication by Juan de Rojas which described it in 1550. Regiomontanus himself is known to studied this theory in the treatises of earlier Viennese mathematicians. Further reading M. Hoskin (ed.) The Cambridge Illustrated History of Astronomy (Cambridge, 1997) D. King, Astronomy in the Service of Islam (Aldershot, 1993) G. L'E. Turner and D. King, ‘The Astrolabe Presented by Regiomontanus to Cardinal Bessarion in 1462’, Nuncius 9 (1994), pp. 165-206 E. Zinner, Leben und Wirken des Joh. Müller von Königsberg (Osnabrück, 1968). Translated by E. Brown as Regiomontanus: His Life and Work (Amsterdam, 1990) D. A. King, 'Astrolabe' in Instruments of Science: An Historical Encyclopedia (London, 1998) J. North, The Fontana History of Astronomy and Cosmology (London, 1994) S. Schechener Genuth, ‘Introduction’ to R. S. Webster and M. Webster (eds.) Western Astrolabes (Chicago, 1998) G. J. Toomer, 'Astronomical Instruments' in Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd ed. (Oxford, 1996) G. J. Toomer, ‘Hipparchus’ in Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd ed. (Oxford, 1996) Text by Graham Hart, Adam Mosley and Liba Taub 2009 G. J. Toomer ‘Ptolemy’ in The Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York, 1970), pp. 186-206 http://www.hps.cam.ac.uk/starry and http://www.astronomicalimages.group.cam.ac.uk/ No part of the text or images may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the authors or of the credited institutions.