Lewis Caerleon and the equation of time: tabular astronomical practices in late fifteenth-century England
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6191994
DOI10.1007/s00407-023-00324-yOpenAlexW4391224716MaRDI QIDQ6191994
Publication date: 12 February 2024
Published in: Archive for History of Exact Sciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00407-023-00324-y
Cites Work
- A survey of the Almagest. Edited by Alexander Jones, with annotation and a new commentary
- The end of an error: Bianchini, Regiomontanus, and the tabulation of stellar coordinates
- Before the end of an error: Giovanni Bianchini's original flawed treatise on the conversion of stellar coordinates
- A History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy
- On Ptolemy's Table for the Equation of Time
- Editing and Analysing Numerical Tables
- Simon Bredon (c. 1300-1372) Physician, Mathematician and Astronomer
- Lewis of Caerleon, Doctor of Medicine, Astronomer, and Mathematician (d. 1494?)
- Cracking the Tabulae permanentes of John of Murs and Firmin of Beauval with Exploratory Data Analysis
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