1st Edition

The Correspondence of John Flamsteed, The First Astronomer Royal Volume 3

Edited By Eric Gray Forbes, Lesley Murdin, Frances Wilmoth Copyright 2001
    1038 Pages
    by CRC Press

    The Correspondence of John Flamsteed discusses this leading figure in the final phases of the seventeenth-century scientific revolution, presents his extensive correspondence with 129 British and foreign scholars all over the world, and touches on many of the scientific discussions of the day. This book, the last volume of the set, contains his letters from number 901 to 1515.

    Acknowledgments
    List of Letters
    Abbreviated References
    Glossary of Astronomical and Other Technical Terms
    List of Symbols
    Introduction
    Letters 901-1515
    Appendix-Official Documents
    Agenda to Previous Volumes
    Biographical Notes
    Index

    Biography

    Eric Gray Forbes, Lesley Murdin, Frances Wilmoth

    "John Flamsteed was England's first Astronomer Royal. He lived and worked for over 40 years in Christopher Wren's Royal Observatory at Greenwich. Throughout those years he corresponded with key figures of the British and continental scientific communities. Astronomical observations, scientific instruments, and the publication of results were all discussed. Surviving letters written to and by Flamsteed during the last 16 years of his life are collected together in this third and final volume of correspondence. It is a window onto the life of a diligent astronomer and onto the scientific world of the early 18th Century.

    The letters … are arranged in chronological order. They are typed versions of handwritten missives in the Cambridge-based Greenwich archive and of others in the UK, St. Petersburg, Basel, New York, and Pisa. Willmoth's introductory essay is an excellent entrance to the letters. She embraces the broad themes, highlights details to look out for, and supplies incisive commentary. Two of Flamsteed's concerns, the publication of his Greenwich observations and his desire to retain independence from the Royal Society, feature in the correspondence.

    Present and future historians of science owe a debt to the thorough and assiduous work of Flamsteed's editors. They've not only made his correspondence available to a wide readership but have led them into this world of meticulously and expertly annotating each letter. A rich, largely untapped source of study is yours for the picking."
    -Carole Stott, The Observatory