Astronomies and Cultures in Early Medieval Europe

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, Nov 20, 2000 - History - 235 pages
Historians have long recognized that the rebirth of science in twelfth-century Europe flowed from a search for ancient scientific texts. But this search presupposes knowledge and interest; we only seek what we know to be valuable. The emergence of scholarly interest after centuries of apparent stagnation seems paradoxical. This book resolves that seeming contradiction by describing four active traditions of early medieval astronomy: one divided the year by observing the Sun; another computed the date of Easter Full Moon; the third determined the time for monastic prayers by watching the course of the stars; and the classical tradition of geometrical astronomy provided a framework for the cosmos. Most of these astronomies were practical; they sustained the communities in which they flourished and reflected and reinforced the values of those communities. These astronomical traditions motivated the search for ancient learning that led to the Scientific Renaissance of the twelfth century.
 

Contents

IV
3
V
4
VI
11
VII
14
VIII
15
IX
17
X
20
XI
24
XXIX
106
XXX
110
XXXI
118
XXXII
119
XXXIII
127
XXXIV
136
XXXV
141
XXXVI
145

XII
25
XIII
29
XIV
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XV
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XVI
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XVII
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XVIII
54
XIX
60
XX
69
XXI
77
XXII
80
XXIII
84
XXIV
87
XXV
93
XXVI
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XXVII
97
XXVIII
100
XXXVII
153
XXXVIII
161
XXXIX
162
XL
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XLI
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XLII
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XLIII
188
XLIV
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XLV
194
XLVI
198
XLVII
199
XLVIII
200
XLIX
202
L
205
LI
225
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