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The mathematician Claudius Ptolemy 'the Alexandrian' as imagined by a 16th-century artist

The Planisphaerium is a work by Ptolemy. The title can be translated as "celestial plane" or "star chart". In this work Ptolemy explored the mathematics of mapping figures inscribed in the celestial sphere onto a plane by what is now known as stereographic projection. This method of projection preserves the properties of circles.

Publication[edit]

Herman of Carinthia, translator of Planisphaerium, with an astrolabe

Originally written in Ancient Greek, Planisphaerium was one of many scientific works which survived from antiquity in Arabic translation. One reason why Planisphaerium attracted interest was that stereographic projection was the mathematical basis of the plane astrolabe, an instrument which was widely used in the medieval Islamic world. In the 12th century the work was translated from Arabic into Latin by Herman of Carinthia, who also translated commentaries by Maslamah Ibn Ahmad al-Majriti. The oldest known translation is in Arabic done by unknown scholar as part the Translation Movement in Baghdad. [1]

Flat earth[edit]

Planisphaeium was unaccompanied by text and appeared to presume the reader had already read Ptolemy's Almagest. This lack of text is to a degree responsible for the overemphasis of the acceptance during the 15th century of a flat earth.[2] The portrayal of Earth on a plane surface and the obvious lack of continents in the Western Hemisphere supported this. Without understanding stereographic projection or more information about the western hemisphere this seems to confirm the view of a flat Earth.

Planisphere[edit]

A plastic planisphere.

The word planisphere (Latin planisphaerium) was originally used in the second century by Ptolemy to describe the representation of a spherical Earth by a map drawn in the plane. [3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Sidoli, Nathan (2007). "The Arabic version of Ptolemy's Planisphere or Flattening the Surface of the Sphere: Text, Translation, Commentary" (PDF). SCIAMVS. 37. 8 (139). {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Parker, John (1965). "A fragment of a fifteenth‐century planisphere in the James Ford Bell collection". Imago Mundi: The International Journal for the History of Cartography. 19 (1). doi:10.1080/03085696508592271.
  3. ^ Journal of the British Astronomical Association yr:1995 pg:35

External links[edit]

Category:Ancient Greek mathematical works Category:Astronomy books Category:Works by Ptolemy