The fascinating story of the two-hundred-year campaign to map the heavens
The period from 1500–1700 saw an unprecendented renaissance in astronomy and the understanding of the heavens.
In this magnificent tour de force, scientific historian Dr Allan Chapman guides us through two hundred years of mapping the stars. He shows how Copernicus, Galileo, Tycho Brahe, and Kepler were all part of a huge movement, which included many churchmen, questing for knowledge of the skies.
Chapman explores the popular view that Galileo and his ilk were unusual for their time, bright sparks of knowledge in a sea of ignorance, opposed by the Church. Or were contemporary Popes, churchmen, and rulers actually fascinated by astronomy and open to new ideas?
Within these pages Copernicus and Galileo find company with Jesuit missionary astronomers in China, Calvinist physicists in Leiden, Bishop John Wilkins’s “Flying Chariot” destined for the moon, Johannes Hevelius, Jeremiah Horrocks, Robert Hooke, Sir Isaac Newton, the early Royal Society, and the Revd James Bradley, who finally detected the earth’s motion in space in 1728.
All of the products displayed on this website are supposed to be Christian.
However, occasionaly some products get added and slip through our automated content filters unnoticed by our Admins.
If you notice anything that shouldn't be here, please help us out and let us know by clicking the following button: