Material culture and mathematical practice in astrology’s long 16th century
From Istanbul to Milan, astrology was an established feature of many late medieval royal courts. General prognostications were drawn up for the year ahead, nativities specially cast for the birth of princes, and interrogations and elections created to determine specific questions and choose advantageous dates for events – all requiring a specific set of mathematical skills. This common astrological culture across the Islamic and Christian worlds progressively diverged from the late 15th century, less due to intellectual change than through new materials and media expanding the art’s appeal and its European audiences. Printing enabled the mass production of bulky volumes of ephemerides, while cheap broadsides and practica opened up a popular market overlapping with prophecy. This shift in European textual production was accompanied by instrumental transformation, with simplified astrolabes targeting astrological use and specific astrological techniques increasingly engraved on 16th-century instruments. This paper explores both astrology’s shifting material culture and the stability of its mathematical practice in the “long 16th century”, from Regiomontanus’ printing prospectus of c. 1472 to the dramatic novelties of Galileo and Kepler.
Date:
28 November 2022, 16:00 (Monday, 8th week, Michaelmas 2022)
Venue:
Maison Francaise d’Oxford, 2-10 Norham Road, Oxford OX2 6SE
Speaker:
Stephen Johnston (University of Oxford)
Organising department:
Oxford Centre for the History of Science, Medicine and Technology
Part of:
Oxford Centre for the History of Science Medicine & Technology (OCHSMT) Seminars and Events
Booking required?:
Not required
Audience:
Members of the University only
Editors:
Laura Spence,
Belinda Clark