Two seminal works of Arabic astronomy in their first and second (greatly revised) editions by Al-Farghani (Alfraganus)
Two seminal works of Arabic astronomy in their first and second (greatly revised) editions by Al-Farghani (Alfraganus)
Two seminal works of Arabic astronomy in their first and second (greatly revised) editions by Al-Farghani (Alfraganus)
Two seminal works of Arabic astronomy in their first and second (greatly revised) editions by Al-Farghani (Alfraganus)
Two seminal works of Arabic astronomy in their first and second (greatly revised) editions by Al-Farghani (Alfraganus)
Two seminal works of Arabic astronomy in their first and second (greatly revised) editions by Al-Farghani (Alfraganus)
Two seminal works of Arabic astronomy in their first and second (greatly revised) editions by Al-Farghani (Alfraganus)
Two seminal works of Arabic astronomy in their first and second (greatly revised) editions by Al-Farghani (Alfraganus)

Two seminal works of Arabic astronomy in their first and second (greatly revised) editions 1521

Al-Farghani (Alfraganus)

20.50 ⨯ 15.50 cm
Actualmente no disponible a través de Gallerease

  • Sobre la obra de arte
    AL-FARGHANI (ALFRAGANUS), Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Kathir
    Continentur in hoc Iibro. Rudimenta astronomica Alfragrani.
    [AL-BATTANI, Muhammad ibn Jabir]. Item Albategnius De motu stellarum, ex observationibus tum propriis, tum Ptolemaei, omnia cum demonstrationibus geometricis & additionibus Joannis de Regiomonte.
    [REGIOMONTANUS, Johannes]. Item Oratio introductoria in omnes scientias mathematicas Ioannis de Regiomonte, Patavii habita, cum Alfraganum publice praelegeret. Eiusdem utilissima introductio in Elementa Euclidis.
    [MELANCHTHON, Philipp]. Item Epistola Phillippi Melanthonis nuncupatoria, ad Senatum Noribergensem. Omnia iam recens prelis publicata.
    Nürnberg, (colophon (2f6): Johann Petreius), 1537. With 29 woodcut diagrams and letterpress tables.
    With: (2) RICCI, Agostino. De motu octavae sphaerae, opus mathematica, atq[ue] philosophia plenum. ... Eiusdam De astronomiae autoribus epistola.

    Paris, Simon de Colines, 1521. 2 editions in 1 volume, the first in 2 parts. 4to (20.5 x 15.5 cm).
    Both set in roman types, including small caps. Contemporary blind-tooled calf.
    Binding badly damaged and spine reinforced with paper at an early date.

    Two rare early editions of important astronomical works, the first combining two major Arabic works on planetary astronomy in Latin translation: the first edition of Kitab az-Zij (on the motions of the stars and particularly the planets) by al-Battani (ca. 850-929) and the second edition of Kitab fi Jawami' 'Ilm al-Nujum (an overview of the material in Ptolmey's Almagest with additions and corrections by the Arabic astronomers) by al-Farghani (ca. 800/05-ca. 870), here published for the first time with Regiomontanus's additions and geometrical proofs.
    Battani was "one of the most influential astronomers of the early Islamic period. ... The accuracy of Battani's observations of equinoxes and solstices, …, is not much inferior to that of Tycho Brahe 700 years later. … His measurements of Ptolemaic solar eccentricity are "clearly better than the values found by Nicolaus Copernicus, ..., and Brahe, ...". "The indebtedness of Copernicus to al-Battani is well known. He quotes him fairly often, … Much more frequent references to him are found in Tycho Brahe's writings and in G.B. Riccioli's New Almagest; in addition, Kepler and ... Galileo evidence their interest in al-Battani's observations" (DSB). The al-Farghani was not published in Arabic until 1669 and the Battani not until the 19th century, so European knowledge of his work came largely through the present edition.

    Together with the second edition of Agostino Ricci’s De motu octavae sphaerae, covering both spherical geometry and kabbala. The present edition is also an important work typographically. Colines was one of the pioneers who introduced Italian Renaissance typography to France, a movement that established many of our present idioms and was to culminate in the 1530s with books in the roman types of Claude Garamont and other great masters.
    With an early purchase(?) inscription on the front paste-down and a note on the blank verso of the last leaf, but with owners' names removed from the title-page, leaving an abrasion and faint stain. Further with a tear in one leaf and some marginal stains, but otherwise internally in good condition and with generous margins. The binding is badly damaged, with most of the upper layer of the calfskin covering on the front board and spine and parts of that on the back board lost. The sewing is somewhat loose but remains attached to the sewing supports. Two important early astronomical editions.

    Ad 1: Houzeau & Lancaster 764 ("fort rare"); VD16 A1202; Zinner 1655; ad 2: Houzeau & Lancaster 2355; for al-Battani and al-Farghani: DSB I, pp. 507-516 & IV, pp. 541-545.
  • Sobre el artista
    Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Kathir al-Farghani, también conocido en Occidente como Alfraganus (en árabe: أبو العباس أحمد بن محمد بن كثير الفرغاني) fue uno de los astrónomos famosos del siglo IX. Nacido en 805 en Ferghana (actual Uzbekistán), Al-Farghani trabajó en Bagdad donde participó en el cálculo del diámetro de la Tierra junto con un equipo de científicos bajo el patrocinio de al-Ma'mūn. Posteriormente se trasladó a El Cairo, donde compuso su importante obra Elementos, que fue escrita entre 833 y 857. El libro era un resumen legible de la astronomía ptolemaica y fue ampliamente estudiado en Europa desde el siglo XII al XVII. También sobreviven dos tratados sobre astrobios de AlFarghani. Al-Farghani murió alrededor del 880.

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