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John Flamsteed

John Flamsteed FRS (19 August 1646 – 31 December 1719)[a] was an English astronomer and the first Astronomer Royal. His main achievements were the preparation of a 3,000-star catalogue, Catalogus Britannicus, and a star atlas called Atlas Coelestis, both published posthumously. He also made the first recorded observations of Uranus, although he mistakenly catalogued it as a star, and he laid the foundation stone for the Royal Greenwich Observatory.

John Flamsteed

John Flamsteed by Thomas Gibson, 1712
Born19 August 1646
Denby, Derbyshire, England
Died31 December 1719 (aged 73)
Burstow, Surrey, England
Alma materJesus College, Cambridge
Known forFirst Astronomer Royal
SpouseMargaret
Scientific career
FieldsAstronomy
InfluencesGiovanni Battista Riccioli[1]
InfluencedJoseph Crosthwait
Abraham Sharp

Life

Flamsteed was born in Denby, Derbyshire, England, the only son of Stephen Flamsteed and his first wife, Mary Spadman. He was educated at the free school of Derby and at Derby School, in St Peter's Churchyard, Derby, near where his father carried on a malting business. At that time, most masters of the school were Puritans. Flamsteed had a solid knowledge of Latin, essential for reading the scientific literature of the day, and a love of history, leaving the school in May 1662.[2]: 3–4 

His progress to Jesus College, Cambridge, recommended by the Master of Derby School, was delayed by some years of chronic ill health. During those years, Flamsteed gave his father some help in his business, and from his father learnt arithmetic and the use of fractions, developing a keen interest in mathematics and astronomy. In July 1662, he was fascinated by the thirteenth-century work of Johannes de Sacrobosco, De sphaera mundi, and on 12 September 1662 observed his first partial solar eclipse. Early in 1663, he read Thomas Fale's Horologiographia: The Art of Dialling, which set off an interest in sundials. In the summer of 1663, he read Wingate's Canon, William Oughtred's Canon, and Thomas Stirrup's Art of Dialling. At about the same time, he acquired Thomas Street's Astronomia Carolina, or A New Theory of the Celestial Motions (Caroline Tables). He associated himself with local gentlemen interested in astronomy, including William Litchford, whose library included the work of the astrologer John Gadbury which included astronomical tables by Jeremiah Horrocks, who had died in 1641 at the age of twenty-two. Flamsteed was greatly impressed (as Isaac Newton had been) by the work of Horrocks.[2]: 8–11 

In August 1665, at the age of nineteen and as a gift for his friend Litchford, Flamsteed wrote his first paper on astronomy, entitled Mathematical Essays, concerning the design, use and construction of an astronomer's quadrant, including tables for the latitude of Derby.[2]: 11 

In September 1670, Flamsteed visited Cambridge and entered his name as an undergraduate at Jesus College.[3] While it seems he never took up full residence, he was there for two months in 1674, and had the opportunity to hear Isaac Newton's Lucasian Lectures.[2]: 26 

Ordained a deacon, he was preparing to take up a living in Derbyshire when he was invited to London by his patron Jonas Moore, Surveyor-General of the Ordnance. Moore had recently made an offer to the Royal Society to pay for the establishment of an observatory. These plans were, however, preempted when Charles II was persuaded by his mistress, Louise de Kérouaille, Duchess of Portsmouth, to hear about a proposal to find longitude by the position of the Moon from an individual known as Le Sieur de St Pierre. Charles appointed a Royal Commission to examine the proposal in December 1674, consisting of Lord Brouncker, Seth Ward, Samuel Moreland, Christopher Wren, Silius Titus, John Pell and Robert Hooke.[citation needed]

Having arrived in London on 2 February 1675, and staying with Jonas Moore at the Tower of London, Flamsteed had the opportunity to be taken by Titus to meet the King. He was subsequently admitted as an official Assistant to the Royal Commission and supplied observations in order to test St Pierre's proposal and to offer his own comments. The commission's conclusions were that, although St Pierre's proposal was not worth further consideration, the King should consider establishing an observatory and appointing an observer in order to better map the stars and the motions of the Moon in order to underpin the successful development of the lunar-distance method of finding longitude.[4]

On 4 March 1675 Flamsteed was appointed by royal warrant "The King's Astronomical Observator" – the first English Astronomer Royal, with an allowance of £100 a year. The warrant stated his task as "rectifieing the Tables of the motions of the Heavens, and the places of the fixed stars, so as to find out the so much desired Longitude of places for Perfecteing the Art of Navigation".[5] In June 1675, another royal warrant provided for the founding of the Royal Greenwich Observatory, and Flamsteed laid the foundation stone on 10 August.[6]

In February 1676, he was admitted a Fellow of the Royal Society, and in July, he moved into the Observatory where he lived until 1684, when he was "[e]levated to the priesthood [and] appointed rector"[7] of the small village of Burstow, near Crawley in Surrey. He held that office, as well as that of Astronomer Royal, until his death. He is buried at Burstow, and the east window in the church was dedicated to him as a memorial.[8]

 
Plaque marking the grave of John Flamsteed and his wife in the chancel of St Bartholomew's Church in Burstow, Surrey

The will of Flamsteed's widow, Margaret, left instructions for her own remains to be deposited "in the same Grave in which Mr John Flamsteed is buryed in the Chancell of Burstow Church". She also left instructions, and twenty five pounds, for the executor of her will to place "in the aforesaid Chancell of Burstow … A Marble stone or Monument, with an inscription in Latin, in memory of the late Reverend Mr. John Flamsteed". It seems no such monument was created, and almost 200 years later, a plaque was placed to mark his burial in the chancel.[9]

After his death, his papers and scientific instruments were taken by his widow. The papers were returned many years later, but the instruments disappeared.[10]

Scientific work

 
Bust of John Flamsteed in the Museum of the Royal Greenwich Observatory

Flamsteed accurately calculated the solar eclipses of 1666 and 1668. He was responsible for several of the earliest recorded sightings of the planet Uranus, which he mistook for a star and catalogued as '34 Tauri'. The first of these was in December 1690, which remains the earliest known sighting of Uranus by an astronomer.

In October 1672, when Mars was in opposition, Flamsteed used eyepieces with illuminated micrometer reticle carrying double cross-hairs, to measure Mars' diurnal parallax, thus allowing Flamsteed to estimate the distance to Mars and hence the astronomical unit. To this end, Flamsteed compared the apparent shift of Mars during the night with respect to other stars, this shift being superimposed on Mars' apparent night-to-night course among the stars.[11]

On 16 August 1680 Flamsteed catalogued a star, 3 Cassiopeiae, that later astronomers were unable to corroborate. Three hundred years later, the American astronomical historian William Ashworth suggested that what Flamsteed may have seen was the most recent supernova in the galaxy's history, an event which would leave as its remnant the strongest radio source outside of the Solar System, known in the third Cambridge (3C) catalogue as 3C 461 and commonly called Cassiopeia A by astronomers. Because the position of "3 Cassiopeiae" does not precisely match that of Cassiopeia A, and because the expansion wave associated with the explosion has been worked backward to the year 1667 and not 1680, some historians feel that all Flamsteed may have done was incorrectly note the position of a star already known.[12]

In 1681 Flamsteed proposed that the two great comets observed in November and December 1680 were not separate bodies, but rather a single comet travelling first towards the Sun and then away from it. Although Isaac Newton first disagreed with Flamsteed, he later came to agree with him and theorized that comets, like planets, moved around the Sun in large, closed elliptical orbits. Flamsteed later learned that Newton had gained access to his observations and data through Edmond Halley,[13] his former assistant with whom he previously had a cordial relationship.[14]

As Astronomer Royal, Flamsteed spent some forty years observing and making meticulous records for his star catalogue, which would eventually triple the number of entries in Tycho Brahe's sky atlas. Unwilling to risk his reputation by releasing unverified data, he kept the incomplete records under seal at Greenwich. In 1712, Isaac Newton, then President of the Royal Society, and Edmond Halley again obtained Flamsteed's data and published a pirated star catalogue.[13] Flamsteed managed to gather three hundred of the four hundred printings and burned them. "If Sir I.N. would be sensible of it, I have done both him and Dr. Halley a great kindness," he wrote to his assistant Abraham Sharp.[15] The data from the pirated catalogue were used by the London cartographer John Senex to produce star charts in the 1720s before Flamsteed's own charts were ready.

In 1725 Flamsteed's own version of Historia Coelestis Britannica was published posthumously, edited by his wife, Margaret. This contained Flamsteed's observations, and included a catalogue of 2,935 stars to much greater accuracy than any prior work. It was considered the first significant contribution of the Greenwich Observatory, and the numerical Flamsteed designations for stars that were added subsequently to a French edition are still in use.[16] In 1729 his wife published his Atlas Coelestis, assisted by Joseph Crosthwait and Abraham Sharp, who were responsible for the technical side.

Honours

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In this article dates on or before 2 September 1752 in the United Kingdom are given in this article in the Julian calendar, but 1 January is always treated as the beginning of the year, even though 25 March was treated as the beginning of the year before 1753 in England.

References

  1. ^ Perkins, Adam J. (2020). King Charles and the Founding of the Royal Observatory. The History of Celestial Navigation. Historical & Cultural Astronomy. Springer Nature. p. 23. Bibcode:2020hcn..book...21P. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-43631-5_2. ISBN 978-3-030-43630-8. S2CID 226678367.
  2. ^ a b c d Birks, John L. (1999) John Flamsteed, the first Astronomer Royal. London, Avon Books. ISBN 1860335683
  3. ^ "Flamsteed, John (FLMT670J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^ Howse, Derek (1997). Greenwich Time and the Longitude. Philip Wilson. ISBN 0856674680.
  5. ^ Willmoth, Frances, ed. (1997). Flamsteed's Stars: New Perspectives on the Life and Work of the First Astronomer Royal, 1646–1719. The Boydell Press. p. 60. ISBN 0851157068.
  6. ^ Howse, Derek (1997). Greenwich Time and Longitude. Philip Wilson. pp. 44–45. ISBN 0856674680.
  7. ^ Rees, Martin (Introduction). "The Life of John Flamsteed: Britain's First Royal Astronomer". Amber Valley Borough Council. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  8. ^ Malden, H. E., ed. (1911). "A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 3. Parishes: Burstow". Victoria County History of Surrey. British History Online. pp. 176–182. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  9. ^ Powell, Rob (16 January 2015). "The Grave of John Flamsteed". Greenwich.co.uk Blogs. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  10. ^ Hirshfeld, Alan W. (2001). Parallax: The Race to Measure the Cosmos. Henry Holt and Co. p. 162. ISBN 0716737116.
  11. ^ Van Helden, A. (2010). Measuring the universe: cosmic dimensions from Aristarchus to Halley. University of Chicago Press. Ch. 12.
  12. ^ Ashworth, William (1980). "A Probable Flamsteed Observation of the Cassiopeia-A Supernova". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 11: 1. Bibcode:1980JHA....11....1A. doi:10.1177/002182868001100102. S2CID 121684168.
  13. ^ a b Jardine, Lisa (15 March 2013). "A Point of View: Crowd-sourcing comets". Magazine. BBC News. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  14. ^ Hughes, David W. (August 1985). "Edmond Halley, Scientist". Journal of the British Astronomical Association. London, UK: British Astronomical Association. 95 (5): 193. Bibcode:1985JBAA...95..193H. Flamsteed was one of the few people who had a bad word to say about Halley. They started off as friends but really fell out some time between 1684 and 1686. Flamsteed suspected Halley of surreptitiously learning of other people's work and then publishing it as his own.
  15. ^ Sobel, Dava (1995). Longitude: The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time. New York: Walker & Company. ISBN 978-0-8027-1529-6.
  16. ^ Ridpath, Ian. "Flamsteed numbers – where they really came from". Ian Ridpath's Star Tales. Retrieved 8 January 2012.
  17. ^ "List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 – 2007" (PDF). The Royal Society. July 2007. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  18. ^ "About Us". Flamsteed Astronomical Society. 24 January 2012. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  19. ^ "Planetary Names: Crater, craters: Flamsteed on Moon". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. International Astronomical Union. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  20. ^ "IAU Minor Planet Center (4987) Flamsteed = 1980 FH12 = 1983 BV = 1990 D". Minor Planet Center. International Astronomical Union. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  21. ^ a b "BBC – Derby – People – John Flamsteed: Astro Genius". BBC Online. BBC. 27 November 2014. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  22. ^ "Flamsteed". Ecclesbourne School. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  23. ^ "John Flamsteed – Derby Blue Plaques". Derby Blue Plaques. Retrieved 3 March 2018.

Further reading

  • Die große Flamsteed-Edition, Himmelskartographie von 1776 bis 1805, 94 originalgetreu faksimilierte Himmelskarten, Albireo Verlag Köln, 2017, ISBN 978-3-9816040-3-0.
  • The correspondence of John Flamsteed, the first Astronomer Royal compiled and edited by Eric G. Forbes, ... Lesley Murdin and Frances Willmoth. Bristol: Institute of Physics Publishing, 1995–2002 ISBN 0-7503-0147-3 (v. 1); ISBN 0-7503-0391-3 (v. 2) ; ISBN 0-7503-0763-3 (v.3)
  • The Gresham lectures of John Flamsteed, edited and introduced by Eric G. Forbes. London: Mansell, 1975 ISBN 0-7201-0518-8
  • Newton's Tyranny: The Suppressed Scientific Discoveries of Stephen Gray and John Flamsteed, David H. Clark & Stephen H.P. Clark. W. H. Freeman, 2001 ISBN 0-7167-4701-4

External links

  • Online catalogue of Flamsteed's working and personal papers (part of the Royal Greenwich Observatory Archives held at Cambridge University Library)
  • Baily, Francis (1837) Supplement to the account of the Rev John Flamsteed, at archive.org, containing Flamsteed's own narrative of the conflict with Newton and numerous letters
  • John Flamsteed Biography (SEDS)
  • Rare book collection at the Vienna Institute of Astronomy
  • Flamsteed biography
  • Flamsteed Astronomy Society

Star catalogues

  • Historiae coelestis libri duo. e-rara.ch. — pirated by Isaac Newton and Edmond Halley edition of Flamsteed's British star catalogue (1712)
  • Historia Coelestis Britannica, Volume 1 (1725)
  • Historia Coelestis Britannica, Volume 2 (1725)
  • Historia Coelestis Britannica, Volume 3 (1725) (British Catalogue page)
  • Éphémérides des mouvemens célestes. — French edition of the British Catalogue with Flamsteed numbers (1783)
  • Caroline Herschel. Catalogue of Stars, taken from Mr. Flamsteed's observations contained in the second volume of the Historia Cœlestis, and not inserted in the British Catalogue ... By Carolina Herschel. With introductory and explanatory remarks to each of them. By William Herschel (1798)
  • Francis Baily. A Catalogue of the Positions (in 1690) of 564 Stars observed by Flamsteed, but not inserted in his British Catalogue, together with some Remarks on Flamsteed's Observations. (1829)
  • Francis Baily. An Account of the Revd. John Flamsteed, the First Astronomer-royal: Compiled from His Own Manuscripts, and Other Authentic Documents, Never Before Published. To which is Added His British Catalogue of Stars, Corrected and Enlarged (1835)
  • Wagman, M. Flamsteed's Missing Stars (1987)

Atlas Coelestis

  • "Atlas Coelestis". RareMaps.com. — scan of the 1st edition (1729)
  • Atlas Coelestis — full digital facsimile of the 1st edition, Linda Hall Library (1729)
  • "Atlas coelestis". National Library of Australia. — full scan of the 2nd edition (1753)
  • Atlas coelestis, Londra Edizione del 1753 da www.atlascoelestis.com
  • Atlas coelestis, Londra Edizione del 1753 colorata a mano da www.atlascoelestis.com
  • "Atlas Céleste de Flamstéed". Utrecht University. — scan of the 3rd edition (1776)
  • Atlas Céleste de Flamstéed — French edition reproduced by J. Fortin, full digital facsimile of the 3rd edition, Linda Hall Library (1776)

john, flamsteed, august, 1646, december, 1719, english, astronomer, first, astronomer, royal, main, achievements, were, preparation, star, catalogue, catalogus, britannicus, star, atlas, called, atlas, coelestis, both, published, posthumously, also, made, firs. John Flamsteed FRS 19 August 1646 31 December 1719 a was an English astronomer and the first Astronomer Royal His main achievements were the preparation of a 3 000 star catalogue Catalogus Britannicus and a star atlas called Atlas Coelestis both published posthumously He also made the first recorded observations of Uranus although he mistakenly catalogued it as a star and he laid the foundation stone for the Royal Greenwich Observatory John FlamsteedFRSJohn Flamsteed by Thomas Gibson 1712Born19 August 1646Denby Derbyshire EnglandDied31 December 1719 aged 73 Burstow Surrey EnglandAlma materJesus College CambridgeKnown forFirst Astronomer RoyalSpouseMargaretScientific careerFieldsAstronomyInfluencesGiovanni Battista Riccioli 1 InfluencedJoseph CrosthwaitAbraham Sharp Contents 1 Life 2 Scientific work 3 Honours 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External links 8 1 Star catalogues 8 2 Atlas CoelestisLife EditFlamsteed was born in Denby Derbyshire England the only son of Stephen Flamsteed and his first wife Mary Spadman He was educated at the free school of Derby and at Derby School in St Peter s Churchyard Derby near where his father carried on a malting business At that time most masters of the school were Puritans Flamsteed had a solid knowledge of Latin essential for reading the scientific literature of the day and a love of history leaving the school in May 1662 2 3 4 His progress to Jesus College Cambridge recommended by the Master of Derby School was delayed by some years of chronic ill health During those years Flamsteed gave his father some help in his business and from his father learnt arithmetic and the use of fractions developing a keen interest in mathematics and astronomy In July 1662 he was fascinated by the thirteenth century work of Johannes de Sacrobosco De sphaera mundi and on 12 September 1662 observed his first partial solar eclipse Early in 1663 he read Thomas Fale s Horologiographia The Art of Dialling which set off an interest in sundials In the summer of 1663 he read Wingate s Canon William Oughtred s Canon and Thomas Stirrup s Art of Dialling At about the same time he acquired Thomas Street s Astronomia Carolina or A New Theory of the Celestial Motions Caroline Tables He associated himself with local gentlemen interested in astronomy including William Litchford whose library included the work of the astrologer John Gadbury which included astronomical tables by Jeremiah Horrocks who had died in 1641 at the age of twenty two Flamsteed was greatly impressed as Isaac Newton had been by the work of Horrocks 2 8 11 In August 1665 at the age of nineteen and as a gift for his friend Litchford Flamsteed wrote his first paper on astronomy entitled Mathematical Essays concerning the design use and construction of an astronomer s quadrant including tables for the latitude of Derby 2 11 In September 1670 Flamsteed visited Cambridge and entered his name as an undergraduate at Jesus College 3 While it seems he never took up full residence he was there for two months in 1674 and had the opportunity to hear Isaac Newton s Lucasian Lectures 2 26 Ordained a deacon he was preparing to take up a living in Derbyshire when he was invited to London by his patron Jonas Moore Surveyor General of the Ordnance Moore had recently made an offer to the Royal Society to pay for the establishment of an observatory These plans were however preempted when Charles II was persuaded by his mistress Louise de Kerouaille Duchess of Portsmouth to hear about a proposal to find longitude by the position of the Moon from an individual known as Le Sieur de St Pierre Charles appointed a Royal Commission to examine the proposal in December 1674 consisting of Lord Brouncker Seth Ward Samuel Moreland Christopher Wren Silius Titus John Pell and Robert Hooke citation needed Having arrived in London on 2 February 1675 and staying with Jonas Moore at the Tower of London Flamsteed had the opportunity to be taken by Titus to meet the King He was subsequently admitted as an official Assistant to the Royal Commission and supplied observations in order to test St Pierre s proposal and to offer his own comments The commission s conclusions were that although St Pierre s proposal was not worth further consideration the King should consider establishing an observatory and appointing an observer in order to better map the stars and the motions of the Moon in order to underpin the successful development of the lunar distance method of finding longitude 4 On 4 March 1675 Flamsteed was appointed by royal warrant The King s Astronomical Observator the first English Astronomer Royal with an allowance of 100 a year The warrant stated his task as rectifieing the Tables of the motions of the Heavens and the places of the fixed stars so as to find out the so much desired Longitude of places for Perfecteing the Art of Navigation 5 In June 1675 another royal warrant provided for the founding of the Royal Greenwich Observatory and Flamsteed laid the foundation stone on 10 August 6 In February 1676 he was admitted a Fellow of the Royal Society and in July he moved into the Observatory where he lived until 1684 when he was e levated to the priesthood and appointed rector 7 of the small village of Burstow near Crawley in Surrey He held that office as well as that of Astronomer Royal until his death He is buried at Burstow and the east window in the church was dedicated to him as a memorial 8 Plaque marking the grave of John Flamsteed and his wife in the chancel of St Bartholomew s Church in Burstow SurreyThe will of Flamsteed s widow Margaret left instructions for her own remains to be deposited in the same Grave in which Mr John Flamsteed is buryed in the Chancell of Burstow Church She also left instructions and twenty five pounds for the executor of her will to place in the aforesaid Chancell of Burstow A Marble stone or Monument with an inscription in Latin in memory of the late Reverend Mr John Flamsteed It seems no such monument was created and almost 200 years later a plaque was placed to mark his burial in the chancel 9 After his death his papers and scientific instruments were taken by his widow The papers were returned many years later but the instruments disappeared 10 Scientific work Edit Bust of John Flamsteed in the Museum of the Royal Greenwich Observatory Flamsteed accurately calculated the solar eclipses of 1666 and 1668 He was responsible for several of the earliest recorded sightings of the planet Uranus which he mistook for a star and catalogued as 34 Tauri The first of these was in December 1690 which remains the earliest known sighting of Uranus by an astronomer In October 1672 when Mars was in opposition Flamsteed used eyepieces with illuminated micrometer reticle carrying double cross hairs to measure Mars diurnal parallax thus allowing Flamsteed to estimate the distance to Mars and hence the astronomical unit To this end Flamsteed compared the apparent shift of Mars during the night with respect to other stars this shift being superimposed on Mars apparent night to night course among the stars 11 On 16 August 1680 Flamsteed catalogued a star 3 Cassiopeiae that later astronomers were unable to corroborate Three hundred years later the American astronomical historian William Ashworth suggested that what Flamsteed may have seen was the most recent supernova in the galaxy s history an event which would leave as its remnant the strongest radio source outside of the Solar System known in the third Cambridge 3C catalogue as 3C 461 and commonly called Cassiopeia A by astronomers Because the position of 3 Cassiopeiae does not precisely match that of Cassiopeia A and because the expansion wave associated with the explosion has been worked backward to the year 1667 and not 1680 some historians feel that all Flamsteed may have done was incorrectly note the position of a star already known 12 In 1681 Flamsteed proposed that the two great comets observed in November and December 1680 were not separate bodies but rather a single comet travelling first towards the Sun and then away from it Although Isaac Newton first disagreed with Flamsteed he later came to agree with him and theorized that comets like planets moved around the Sun in large closed elliptical orbits Flamsteed later learned that Newton had gained access to his observations and data through Edmond Halley 13 his former assistant with whom he previously had a cordial relationship 14 As Astronomer Royal Flamsteed spent some forty years observing and making meticulous records for his star catalogue which would eventually triple the number of entries in Tycho Brahe s sky atlas Unwilling to risk his reputation by releasing unverified data he kept the incomplete records under seal at Greenwich In 1712 Isaac Newton then President of the Royal Society and Edmond Halley again obtained Flamsteed s data and published a pirated star catalogue 13 Flamsteed managed to gather three hundred of the four hundred printings and burned them If Sir I N would be sensible of it I have done both him and Dr Halley a great kindness he wrote to his assistant Abraham Sharp 15 The data from the pirated catalogue were used by the London cartographer John Senex to produce star charts in the 1720s before Flamsteed s own charts were ready In 1725 Flamsteed s own version of Historia Coelestis Britannica was published posthumously edited by his wife Margaret This contained Flamsteed s observations and included a catalogue of 2 935 stars to much greater accuracy than any prior work It was considered the first significant contribution of the Greenwich Observatory and the numerical Flamsteed designations for stars that were added subsequently to a French edition are still in use 16 In 1729 his wife published his Atlas Coelestis assisted by Joseph Crosthwait and Abraham Sharp who were responsible for the technical side Honours EditFellow of the Royal Society 1677 17 The Flamsteed Astronomy Society is named in his honour and is based at The Royal Observatory Greenwich 18 The crater Flamsteed on the Moon is named after him 19 The asteroid 4987 Flamsteed is named in his honour 20 He is commemorated in several Derbyshire schools 21 The science block at John Port Spencer Academy is named Flamsteed John Flamsteed Community School in Denby carries his name 21 Flamsteed House at the Ecclesbourne School in Duffield is also named after him 22 Derby City Council erected a Blue Plaque in his honour at the Queen Street former Clock Works in Derby which also honours Joseph Wright of Derby who lived in the house formerly owned by Flamsteed 23 See also EditFlamsteed objects 3 Cassiopeiae possibly a supernova sighting or recording error Notes Edit In this article dates on or before 2 September 1752 in the United Kingdom are given in this article in the Julian calendar but 1 January is always treated as the beginning of the year even though 25 March was treated as the beginning of the year before 1753 in England References Edit Perkins Adam J 2020 King Charles and the Founding of the Royal Observatory The History of Celestial Navigation Historical amp Cultural Astronomy Springer Nature p 23 Bibcode 2020hcn book 21P doi 10 1007 978 3 030 43631 5 2 ISBN 978 3 030 43630 8 S2CID 226678367 a b c d Birks John L 1999 John Flamsteed the first Astronomer Royal London Avon Books ISBN 1860335683 Flamsteed John FLMT670J A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Howse Derek 1997 Greenwich Time and the Longitude Philip Wilson ISBN 0856674680 Willmoth Frances ed 1997 Flamsteed s Stars New Perspectives on the Life and Work of the First Astronomer Royal 1646 1719 The Boydell Press p 60 ISBN 0851157068 Howse Derek 1997 Greenwich Time and Longitude Philip Wilson pp 44 45 ISBN 0856674680 Rees Martin Introduction The Life of John Flamsteed Britain s First Royal Astronomer Amber Valley Borough Council Retrieved 2 May 2017 Malden H E ed 1911 A History of the County of Surrey Volume 3 Parishes Burstow Victoria County History of Surrey British History Online pp 176 182 Retrieved 14 June 2013 Powell Rob 16 January 2015 The Grave of John Flamsteed Greenwich co uk Blogs Retrieved 3 March 2018 Hirshfeld Alan W 2001 Parallax The Race to Measure the Cosmos Henry Holt and Co p 162 ISBN 0716737116 Van Helden A 2010 Measuring the universe cosmic dimensions from Aristarchus to Halley University of Chicago Press Ch 12 Ashworth William 1980 A Probable Flamsteed Observation of the Cassiopeia A Supernova Journal for the History of Astronomy 11 1 Bibcode 1980JHA 11 1A doi 10 1177 002182868001100102 S2CID 121684168 a b Jardine Lisa 15 March 2013 A Point of View Crowd sourcing comets Magazine BBC News Retrieved 20 May 2013 Hughes David W August 1985 Edmond Halley Scientist Journal of the British Astronomical Association London UK British Astronomical Association 95 5 193 Bibcode 1985JBAA 95 193H Flamsteed was one of the few people who had a bad word to say about Halley They started off as friends but really fell out some time between 1684 and 1686 Flamsteed suspected Halley of surreptitiously learning of other people s work and then publishing it as his own Sobel Dava 1995 Longitude The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time New York Walker amp Company ISBN 978 0 8027 1529 6 Ridpath Ian Flamsteed numbers where they really came from Ian Ridpath s Star Tales Retrieved 8 January 2012 List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 2007 PDF The Royal Society July 2007 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2018 About Us Flamsteed Astronomical Society 24 January 2012 Retrieved 3 March 2018 Planetary Names Crater craters Flamsteed on Moon Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature International Astronomical Union Retrieved 3 March 2018 IAU Minor Planet Center 4987 Flamsteed 1980 FH12 1983 BV 1990 D Minor Planet Center International Astronomical Union Retrieved 3 March 2018 a b BBC Derby People John Flamsteed Astro Genius BBC Online BBC 27 November 2014 Retrieved 3 March 2018 Flamsteed Ecclesbourne School Retrieved 3 March 2018 John Flamsteed Derby Blue Plaques Derby Blue Plaques Retrieved 3 March 2018 Further reading EditDie grosse Flamsteed Edition Himmelskartographie von 1776 bis 1805 94 originalgetreu faksimilierte Himmelskarten Albireo Verlag Koln 2017 ISBN 978 3 9816040 3 0 The correspondence of John Flamsteed the first Astronomer Royal compiled and edited by Eric G Forbes Lesley Murdin and Frances Willmoth Bristol Institute of Physics Publishing 1995 2002 ISBN 0 7503 0147 3 v 1 ISBN 0 7503 0391 3 v 2 ISBN 0 7503 0763 3 v 3 The Gresham lectures of John Flamsteed edited and introduced by Eric G Forbes London Mansell 1975 ISBN 0 7201 0518 8 Newton s Tyranny The Suppressed Scientific Discoveries of Stephen Gray and John Flamsteed David H Clark amp Stephen H P Clark W H Freeman 2001 ISBN 0 7167 4701 4External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Flamsteed Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Flamsteed John Online catalogue of Flamsteed s working and personal papers part of the Royal Greenwich Observatory Archives held at Cambridge University Library Baily Francis 1837 Supplement to the account of the Rev John Flamsteed at archive org containing Flamsteed s own narrative of the conflict with Newton and numerous letters John Flamsteed Biography SEDS Rare book collection at the Vienna Institute of Astronomy Flamsteed biography Flamsteed Astronomy SocietyStar catalogues Edit Historiae coelestis libri duo e rara ch pirated by Isaac Newton and Edmond Halley edition of Flamsteed s British star catalogue 1712 Historia Coelestis Britannica Volume 1 1725 Historia Coelestis Britannica Volume 2 1725 Historia Coelestis Britannica Volume 3 1725 British Catalogue page Ephemerides des mouvemens celestes French edition of the British Catalogue with Flamsteed numbers 1783 Caroline Herschel Catalogue of Stars taken from Mr Flamsteed s observations contained in the second volume of the Historia Cœlestis and not inserted in the British Catalogue By Carolina Herschel With introductory and explanatory remarks to each of them By William Herschel 1798 Francis Baily A Catalogue of the Positions in 1690 of 564 Stars observed by Flamsteed but not inserted in his British Catalogue together with some Remarks on Flamsteed s Observations 1829 Francis Baily An Account of the Revd John Flamsteed the First Astronomer royal Compiled from His Own Manuscripts and Other Authentic Documents Never Before Published To which is Added His British Catalogue of Stars Corrected and Enlarged 1835 Wagman M Flamsteed s Missing Stars 1987 Atlas Coelestis Edit Atlas Coelestis RareMaps com scan of the 1st edition 1729 Atlas Coelestis full digital facsimile of the 1st edition Linda Hall Library 1729 Atlas coelestis National Library of Australia full scan of the 2nd edition 1753 Atlas coelestis Londra Edizione del 1753 da www atlascoelestis com Atlas coelestis Londra Edizione del 1753 colorata a mano da www atlascoelestis com Atlas Celeste de Flamsteed Utrecht University scan of the 3rd edition 1776 Atlas Celeste de Flamsteed French edition reproduced by J Fortin full digital facsimile of the 3rd edition Linda Hall Library 1776 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Flamsteed amp oldid 1142753392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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