Researchers are painstakingly reconstructing the oldest-known map of the night sky – previously thought lost forever – by X-raying parchment
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Romania

seen from Singapore

seen from Germany

seen from Egypt
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Romania

seen from Singapore

seen from Egypt
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
Researchers are painstakingly reconstructing the oldest-known map of the night sky – previously thought lost forever – by X-raying parchment
Hipparchus, Alexandria
The Observatory of Alexandria with an astronomer measuring the heavens with some instruments (cross staff, mariner’s astrolabe) which actually belong to a much later period (source: Camille Flammarion, L’Astronomie Populaire: Description générale du ciel, Paris: 1880).
My first entry in the Classics-tober 2024 Challenge. "Harmodius and Aristogeiton" (they were the original "Be gay, do crimes", you can't convince me otherwise!)
Center below: The tyrant Hipparchus, after being assassinated by Harmodius and Aristogeiton (notice the Family Guy death pose?)
Left to right: Harmodius, Aristogeiton
Behind them: Varius Scythian guards, ready to kill them
First time learning about them was through Abraham Kawa's, Alecos Papadatos' and Anni Di Donna's (if the two last names are familiar to you, it's because they have worked on "Logicomix", which I strongly recommend) graphic novel, "Democracy", which retells how democracy came to be in Ancient Athens. I do like it, although the design is not that appealing
(via Part of lost star catalog of Hipparchus found lurking under medieval codex | Ars Technica)
The Greek astronomer Hipparchus is often called the "father of astronomy." He's credited with discovering the Earth's precession (how it wobbles on its axis), and calculating the motions of the Sun and Moon, among other achievements. Hipparchus was also believed to be compiling a star catalog—perhaps the earliest known attempt to map the night sky to date—sometime between 162 and 127 BCE, based on references in historical texts.
Scholars have been searching for that catalog for centuries. Now, thanks to a technique called multispectral imaging, they have found what seems to be the first known Greek remnants of Hipparchus' star catalog. It was hidden beneath Christian texts on medieval parchment, according to a new paper published in the Journal for the History of Astronomy.
ancient parchment recycling overcome by modern technology
Astronomy Inspired Design in Media: Part 8
Lord of the Ring: Rings of Power (2022)
Episode 3: Adar
For about two seconds, as a ship moves into the inland, on the top of a watchtower, you’ll see this:
This is appears reminiscent of the simplest form of the armillary sphere from the 1st century
Astronomers like Hipparchus would have used these devices to track the movement of important objects through the sky. The simplest form of the armillary sphere has four bands with the center object representing either the Earth in a geocentric model or the sun in a heliocentric model
The instrument on the top of the watchtower appears most similar to the old style of geocentric armillary spheres where the Earth is the center of the universe that all objects rotate around
A: The Declination band
Declination is a range between 0-90 degrees in the Northern Hemisphere and -90-0 degrees in the Southern Hemisphere. It describes how far above the celestial equator an object like a star is and kind of acts like an astronomical latitude
B: Right Ascension band
Right ascension is a range from 0 hours to 24 hours and is the distance of a point east of the First Point of Aries. It is measured along the celestial equator and written in hours, minutes, and seconds. It acts almost like an astronomical longitude
C: Solstice band
The position that the solstice band sit represent the time when the summer and winter solstice occur (as they pass through the points Cancer and Capricorn)
D: Equinoctial band
The position that the equinoctial band sit represent when the spring and autumn equinoxes occur (as they pass through the points Aries and Libra in the ecliptic)
E: Earth (or Sun) at the center
The center represents the object that the sphere’s sky rotates around. In a heliocentric model this is the Sun and in the geocentric model this is the Earth
Below are some artistic representations of the Ancient Greek astronomer Hipparchus observing the night sky with a large armillary nearby for determining the position of things like stars and celestial time
If you haven’t already, I’d recommend giving Rings of Power a watch. It is a very fun and beautiful show with surprising sweet and thoughtful dialogue. This kind of hopeful storytelling is my favorite kind of fantasy story, I highly recommend watching just for the Elrond, Durin, and Harfoots storyline alone
“Astronomy Inspired Design in Media” is Wednesday (as I find them)
Hipparchus’ map of the sky
“First known map of night sky found hidden in Medieval parchmen
Fabled star catalogue by ancient Greek astronomer Hipparchus had been feared lost.
Jo Marchant
The library of St Catherine’s Monastery on the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt yielded a palimpsest containing stellar coordinates by Hipparchus.Credit: Amanda Ahn/Alamy
A medieval parchment from a monastery in Egypt has yielded a surprising treasure. Hidden beneath Christian texts, scholars have discovered what seems to be part of the long-lost star catalogue of the astronomer Hipparchus — believed to be the earliest known attempt to map the entire sky.
Scholars have been searching for Hipparchus’s catalogue for centuries. James Evans, a historian of astronomy at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington, describes the find as “rare” and “remarkable”. The extract is published online this week in the Journal for the History of Astronomy1. Evans says it proves that Hipparchus, often considered the greatest astronomer of ancient Greece, really did map the heavens centuries before other known attempts. It also illuminates a crucial moment in the birth of science, when astronomers shifted from simply describing the patterns they saw in the sky to measuring and predicting them.
The manuscript came from the Greek Orthodox St Catherine’s Monastery in the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt, but most of its 146 leaves, or folios, are now owned by the Museum of the Bible in Washington DC. The pages contain the Codex Climaci Rescriptus, a collection of Syriac texts written in the tenth or eleventh centuries. But the codex is a palimpsest: parchment that was scraped clean of older text by the scribe so that it could be reused.
The older writing was thought to contain further Christian texts and, in 2012, biblical scholar Peter Williams at the University of Cambridge, UK, asked his students to study the pages as a summer project. One of them, Jamie Klair, unexpectedly spotted a passage in Greek often attributed to the astronomer Eratosthenes. In 2017, the pages were re-analysed using state-of-the-art multispectral imaging. Researchers at the Early Manuscripts Electronic Library in Rolling Hills Estates, California, and the University of Rochester in New York took 42 photographs of each page in varying wavelengths of light, and used computer algorithms to search for combinations of frequencies that enhanced the hidden text.
Star signs Nine folios revealed astronomical material, which (according to radiocarbon dating and the style of the writing) was probably transcribed in the fifth or sixth centuries. It includes star-origin myths by Eratosthenes and parts of a famous third-century-BC poem called Phaenomena, which describes the constellations. Then, while poring over the images during a coronavirus lockdown, Williams noticed something much more unusual. He alerted science historian Victor Gysembergh at the French national scientific research centre CNRS in Paris. “I was very excited from the beginning,” says Gysembergh. “It was immediately clear we had star coordinates.”
The surviving passage, deciphered by Gysembergh and his colleague Emmanuel Zingg at Sorbonne University in Paris, is about a page long. It states the length and breadth in degrees of the constellation Corona Borealis, the northern crown, and gives coordinates for the stars at its extreme north, south, east and west.
Several lines of evidence point to Hipparchus as the source, beginning with the idiosyncratic way in which some of the data are expressed. And, crucially, the precision of the ancient astronomer’s measurements enabled the team to date the observations. The phenomenon of precession — in which Earth slowly wobbles on its axis by around one degree every 72 years — means that the position of the ‘fixed’ stars slowly shifts in the sky. The researchers were able to use this to check when the ancient astronomer must have made his observations, and found that the coordinates fit roughly 129 BC — during the time when Hipparchus was working.
Until now, says Evans, the only star catalogue that had survived from antiquity was one compiled by astronomer Claudius Ptolemy in Alexandria, Egypt, in the second century AD. His treatise Almagest, one of the most influential scientific texts in history, set out a mathematical model of the cosmos — with Earth at its centre — that was accepted for more than 1,200 years. He also gave the coordinates and magnitudes of more than 1,000 stars. However, it is mentioned several times in ancient sources that the person who first measured the stars was Hipparchus, who worked on the Greek island of Rhodes three centuries before, roughly between 190 and 120 BC.
Location, location, location
Babylonian astronomers had previously measured the positions of some stars around the zodiac, the constellations that lie along the ecliptic — the Sun’s annual path against the fixed stars, as seen from Earth. But Hipparchus was the first to define the locations of stars using two coordinates, and to map stars across the whole sky. Among other things, it was Hipparchus himself who first discovered Earth’s precession, and he modelled the apparent motions of the Sun and Moon.
Gysembergh and his colleagues used the data they discovered to confirm that coordinates for three other star constellations (Ursa Major, Ursa Minor and Draco), in a separate medieval Latin manuscript known as the Aratus Latinus, must also come directly from Hipparchus. “The new fragment makes this much, much clearer,” says Mathieu Ossendrijver, a historian of astronomy at the Free University of Berlin. “This star catalogue that has been hovering in the literature as an almost hypothetical thing has become very concrete.”
The researchers think that Hipparchus’s original list, like Ptolemy’s, would have included observations of nearly every visible star in the sky. Without a telescope, says Gysembergh, he must have used a sighting tube, known as a dioptra, or a mechanism called an armillary sphere. “It represents countless hours of work.”
The relationship between Hipparchus and Ptolemy has always been murky. Some scholars have suggested that Hipparchus’s catalogue never existed. Others (starting with sixteenth-century astronomer Tycho Brahe) argued that Ptolemy had stolen Hipparchus’s data and claimed it as his own. “Many people think that Hipparchus was the truly great discoverer,” says Gysembergh, whereas Ptolemy was “an amazing teacher” who compiled his predecessors’ work.
From the data in the fragments, the team concludes that Ptolemy did not simply copy Hipparchus’s numbers. But perhaps he should have: Hipparchus’s observations seem to be notably more accurate, with the coordinates read so far correct to within one degree. And whereas Ptolemy based his coordinate system on the ecliptic, Hipparchus used the celestial equator, a system more common in modern star maps.
The discovery “enriches our picture” of Hipparchus, says Evans. “It gives us a fascinating glimpse of what he actually did.” And in doing so, it sheds light on a key development in Western civilization, the “mathematization of nature”, in which scholars seeking to understand the Universe shifted from simply describing the patterns they saw to aiming to measure, calculate and predict.
Hipparchus was the pivotal figure responsible for “turning astronomy into a predictive science”, agrees Ossendrijver. In his only surviving work, Hipparchus criticized earlier astronomical writers for not caring about numerical accuracy in their visions of orbits and celestial spheres.
He is thought to have been inspired by his contact with Babylonian astronomers, and to have had access to centuries’ worth of their precise observations. The Babylonians had no interest in modelling how the Solar System was arranged in three dimensions but, because of their belief in celestial omens, they made accurate observations and developed mathematical methods to model and predict the timing of events such as lunar eclipses. With Hipparchus, this tradition merged with the Greek geometric approach, says Evans, and “modern astronomy really begins”.
The researchers hope that as imaging techniques improve, they will uncover further star coordinates, giving them a larger data set to study. Several parts of the Codex Climaci Rescriptus have not yet been deciphered. It is also possible that additional pages from the star catalogue survive in the St Catherine’s library, which contains more than 160 palimpsests. Efforts to read these have already revealed previously unknown Greek medical texts, including drug recipes, surgical instructions and a guide to medicinal plants.
Beyond that, multispectral imaging of palimpsests is opening a rich new seam of ancient texts in archives around the world. “In Europe alone, there are literally thousands of palimpsests in major libraries,” says Gysembergh. “This is just one case, that’s very exciting, of a research possibility that can be applied to thousands of manuscripts with amazing discoveries every time.”
Nature 610, 613-614 (2022)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-022-03296-1″
Source (with also a cross-fade montage showing a detail of the palimpsest under ordinary lighting, under multispectral analysis and with a reconstruction of the hidden text): https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-03296-1
Hipparchus (-190 to -120) was the greatest ancient Greek astronomer. He took astronomy almost as far as it would go before the invention of the telescope some 1700 years later. Ptolemy is more famo…