The British Empire reaches for the stars

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Atlas Coelestis.

By the late Reverend Mr John Flamsteed, Regius Professor of Astronomy at Greenwich.

SKU: 20502 Type:

FLAMSTEED, John; and Margaret FLAMSTEED
London,
[Margaret Flamsteed and James Hodgson],
1729
Folio (535 by 395mm), engraved portrait of Flamsteed by George Vertue after Thomas Gibson, vignette title-page, dedication leaf, 9-page introduction, list of subscribers, 27 double-page engraved charts on 28 mapsheets (chart of Hydra Crater on two joined sheets), all mounted on guards, by James Mynde and Abraham Sharp, Cassiopea title trimmed to within upper neatline with minor loss, Taurus trimmed to within lower neatline with minor loss, Pisces and Sagittarius lower part of image with tear skilfully repaired, engraved head- and tail-piece and an initial; contemporary, calf-backed blue marbled paper boards, blue morocco, gilt lettering-piece to spine.
640 by 254mm. (25.25 by 10 inches).
20502

To scale:

notes:

notes:

John Flamsteed's (1646-1719) atlas was published posthumously in 1729 by his wife Margaret, assisted by James Hodgson. It was intended as an accompaniment to Flamsteed's catalogue of 2,935 stars, 'Historia Coelestis Britannica' (1725), also posthumous, and "the most accurate and comprehensive celestial audit of its day. Resulting from the establishment of the Royal Observatory at Greenwich by King Charles II in 1675, Flamsteed's catalogue and atlas could be seen as a demons...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Ridpath, 'Antique Star Atlases' online; Shirley, 'Atlas', C.FLAM-1a; Warner, pages 80-82; Willmoth for ODNB

provenance:

provenance: