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- Astronomy (x)
- 1709 (x)
- 1632 (x)
- 1606 (x)
- Search Results
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Title
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View of the Tower
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1809
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Description
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Ackermann, R., The Microcosm of London, Vol. III, London 1809-1810 Plate no. 85
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Title
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Coal Exchange
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1808
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Description
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Ackermann, R., The Microcosm of London, Vol. I, London 1808 Plate no. 17
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Title
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William Whiston - fig.1 for A New Theory of the Earth (London, 5th edn., 1737)
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1737
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Description
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This figure traces the path of a comet. Newton and Edmond Halley had worked hard to demonstrate that comets were predictable, periodic bodies which therefore could not be used to prognosticate divine interventions in the natural order. Yet they also suggested that comets deposited aethers to revitalize a spiritually depleted Earth. Whiston liked this mixture of close geometrical analysis with divine mechanism, and extended the discussion. He argued that comets had been reponsible for key moments in the Earth’s natural and biblical history - for instance, it was a great comet that had caused the Deluge. He even equated comets with Hell: as they moved in their highly eccentric orbits, they alternated between the “Darkness of Torment” and the “ungodly Smoak of Fire.” For Whiston, comets thus became “the place of Punishment for wicked Men after the general Resurrection.”
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Title
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Excise Office, Broad St.
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1810
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Description
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Ackermann, R., The Microcosm of London, Vol. III, London 1809-1810 Plate no. 103
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Title
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Queen’s Palace, St. James’s Park
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1809
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Description
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Ackermann, R., The Microcosm of London, Vol. III, London 1809-1810 Plate no. 65
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Title
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Kings Bench Prison
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1808
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Description
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Ackermann, R., The Microcosm of London, Vol. II, London 1809 Plate no. 46
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Title
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India House, The Sale Room
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1808
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Description
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Ackermann, R., The Microcosm of London, Vol. II, London 1809 Plate no. 45
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Title
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South Sea House, Dividend Hall
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1810
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Description
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Ackermann, R., The Microcosm of London, Vol. III, London 1809-1810 Plate no. 102
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Title
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tile page: Oculus Enoch et Eliae, sive Radius Sideromysticus pars Prima
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1645
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Description
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Anton Maria Schyrleus (1597-1660) was a Capuchin priest and professor, who worked in Bohemia, Trier and Ravenna. His astronomical work was completed in the low countries in the 1640s, and resulted in this rather unusual work -- a richly illustrated example of baroque natural philosophy. The Oculus might be considered a mystical work, reflecting the harmonies of an earth-centered, Tychonic cosmos in scriptural terms. The illustrations give a vivid impression of its combination of technical astronomy and mechanics with rich symbolism.
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Title
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Map of the world
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1627
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Description
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From Kepler’s “Rudolphine Tables.” (1627).
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Title
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Page from the autograph album of Johann Jakob Frisch
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Format
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photograph: print
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Date
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1624
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Description
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Frisch was a nephew of Johannes Kepler. The album was kept by Frisch while a law student at the University of Tubingen (from 1624 to 1631), where Kepler himself also had studied. Autograph entries are typicaly in Latin, and range from a few lines of verse or prose to elaborate miniature illustrations, comic and serious. Kepler’s autograph is included in the book within a Latin inscription dated 1625.
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Title
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Newgate Chapel
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1809
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Description
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Ackermann, R., The Microcosm of London, Vol. II, London 1809 Plate no. 57
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Title
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Kepler, “Harmonices mundi” (Harmonies of the World)
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Format
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photograph: negative
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Date
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1619
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Description
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Illustration from Book III, chapter 10, “concerning the Tetrachords...,” in which attributes of musical scales are discussed. Rocco Collection, History of Science.