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    Re: Early lunars
    From: George Huxtable
    Date: 2010 Mar 20, 13:27 -0000

    That's interesting stuff, from John, and all quite new to me.
    
    Does Wright, or Roger of Hereford, quote any actual numbers for those 
    longitudes?
    
    In those days, times were, of course, always local times, and predictions 
    in tables were always those relating to local noon.
    
    The quantity that would be most affected by the longitude of the city, for 
    which the prediction was made, is the ecliptic longitude of the Moon.
    
    There were (and are) difficulties in comparing times-of-night at which a 
    particular phase of a Moon eclipse occurred. One relates to the diffuse 
    edge of the Earth's shadow on the Moon, causing a wide penumbra, and making 
    the judgment of how far the shadow had got, to be a somewhat individual 
    matter.
    
    The other is the judgment, and even the definition, of the time-of-night at 
    which it occurred, in an age without clocks. The monastical hours of the 
    night, for prayer,  were then one-twelfth of the interval between sunset 
    and sunrise, so the length of an hour varied with season and with latitude. 
    However, the specified eclipse, on September 12th, was near an equinox, so 
    those differences were not then great. Time was likely to have been 
    measured by the burning of a marked candle.. Better would have been a 
    measured altitude of a star, if they were up to it. I doubt if the 
    Nocturnal, as an instrument, existed then.
    
    George.
    contact George Huxtable, at  george@hux.me.uk
    or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222)
    or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: "Apache Runner" 
    To: 
    Sent: Saturday, March 20, 2010 11:52 AM
    Subject: [NavList] Re: AW: Early lunars
    
    
    George -
    
    John Kirtland Wright does not definitively say that some form of lunars 
    were
    employed to find the longitude of major cities, but advances the conjecture
    with some evidence, particularly citing Roger of Hereford's observation of
    lunar eclipses.   I'll just quote the text here from the "Notes on.." 
    paper:
    
    "Though these various method were known to astronomers and astrologers,
    there is nothing to show that any large number of positions were determined
    by astronomical means.   We know, however, that between the twelfth and
    fourteenth centuries, tables were constructed for the meridians of at least
    a dozen cities; we have in manuscript such tables for Toledo, Marseilles,
    Hereford, London, Toulouse, Cremona, and Novara, and we have clear evidence
    that similar tables were in existence in 1232 for Paris, Palermo, Pisa,
    Constantinople and Genoa.
    
    In their construction some sort of astronomic observations must have been
    made and it is more than likely that the eclipse method of finding
    longitudes was given practical application. that this was done in the case
    of tables for Hereford, Marseilles, and Toledo is certain, for Roger of
    Hereford, who adapted the Toledo Tables to the meridian of his city, tells
    us that the time of the eclipse of September 12th, 1178, was observed in
    these three cities and that their longitudes in relation to Arin, the world
    center, were in that way determined.   It will also become evident from 
    what
    follows that the relative positions of several other points in Europe were
    known with sufficient accuracy to warrant us in concluding that the
    differences in longitudes separating these points had been calculated by
    astronomical means."
    
    Pages 84 and 85 in Wright's paper.
    
    I omitted the references in the above.  "Arin" was a mythical city that was
    used to denote the halfway point from the prime meridian used during that
    era.   It was a tool to aid the calculations more than anything else,
    according to Wright's paper.
    
    The other observations that I'm aware of were two measurements of longitude
    carried out by Columbus during two of his voyages.   He carried with him
    ephemerides constructed in Nuremberg (I forget the name of the astrologer
    who constructed them).    In both cases he timed the lunar eclipses against
    the time of sunset.   Unfortunately, the values he derived were quite far
    off.   This I obtained from Samuel Eliot Morrison's biography of Columbus.
     One of the measurements was of St. Ann's Bay in what is now Jamaica, 
    where,
    incidentally, he obtained a latitude using a quadrant on Polaris of 18
    degrees, 30 minutes, which is phenomenally good for a quadrant sighting the
    North star (having tried this myself in Jamaica).   I should add that in
    both measurements, he was on solid ground, not on shipboard.
    
    Best,
    
    John H.
    
    
    
    On Sat, Mar 20, 2010 at 7:01 AM, George Huxtable  wrote:
    
    > Thanks for the information, and the offer of a scan.
    >
    > But there's no urgency, just interest. Isis is available to me, both in 
    > the
    > library of the Museum for the History of Science, in Oxford, and in the
    > Bodleian. I'll add it to my long list of things to look at, next visit.
    >
    > If there's evidence of any real astronomical determination of longitudes,
    > before 1500 (or even before the early 1600s), I  would be interested to
    > learn about it.
    >
    > Ptolemy's Geographica arrived back in the West some time after 1400. We
    > discussed the Marseilles tables on the list a few months back, and as I
    > remember, these were stated as dating from 12th century, well before that
    > recall of Geographia, and contained many longitudes, some good ones and
    > some very bad ones. I have presumed these came from dead-reckoning of
    > travellers, in day's journeys, by land or sea, rather than by astronomy. 
    > Is
    > that wrong?
    >
    > George.
    >
    > contact George Huxtable, at  george@hux.me.uk
    > or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222)
    > or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.
    > ----- Original Message -----
    > From: "Apache Runner" 
    > To: 
    > Sent: Saturday, March 20, 2010 9:52 AM
    > Subject: [NavList] Re: AW: Early lunars
    >
    >
    > Wolfgang -
    >
    > Yes on both accounts.
    >
    > John H.
    >
    > On Sat, Mar 20, 2010 at 5:30 AM, Wolfgang K�berer <
    > koeberer@navigationsgeschichte.de> wrote:
    >
    > > This is the article, I presume:
    > >
    > > Wright, John Kirtland
    > > Notes on the knowledge of latitudes and longitudes in the Middle Ages.
    > > in: Isis, Vol.  5 (1923), 75 - 98.
    > >
    > > He has also written a book on "The geographical lore of the Time of the
    > > Crusades".
    > >
    > > I can bring along a copy of the article in May, George, or send a scan.
    > >
    > > Wolfgang
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    
    
    
    

       
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