The article introduces a previously unknown fourteenth-century treatise on computus and calendrical astronomy entitled Expositio kalendarii novi, whose author proposed elaborate solutions to the technical flaws inherent in the calendar used by the Roman Church. An analysis of verbal parallels to other contemporary works on the same topic makes it possible to establish that the Expositio was produced in the context of a calendar reform initiative led by Pope Clement VI in 1344/45 and that this anonymous text is probably identical to a ‘great and laborious work’ on the calendar that the monk Johannes de Termis prepared for the pope around this time. Its author strove to make an original contribution by extracting new astronomical parameters f...
This article examines an unstudied set of astronomical tables for the meridian of Cambridge, also kn...
International audienceManuscript Escorial O II 10 is a late 13th-century document containing a well-...
This work is proposing an archaeo-astronomical study of the Julian calendar, a reform of the Roman ...
The article introduces a previously unknown fourteenth-century treatise on computus and calendrical ...
The main goal of this work is to describe calendars of various countries, and that both calendars, w...
During the 16th century the disagreement between the dates of the Julian calendar, that had been in ...
The development of Astronomy in the Middle Ages is closely intertwined with the interests of the Chu...
On 24 February 1582, Pope Gregory XIII issued a Bull, inter gravissimas, initiating the reform of th...
It was on the first of January 45 BC when calendar reform instigated by Julius Caesar came into forc...
Among the works by Jean des Murs that have yet to be printed are his Canones tabularum Alfonsii, whi...
This article presents an edition and brief analysis of the previously overlooked text De composition...
This article is dedicated to the obscure Computus of Magister Cunestabulus (England, 1175), which of...
The common era calendar was a calendar from the ancient Roman calendar that uses lunar system that J...
Includes bibliographical references (pages li-lxi) and indexes.Three computistic writings of the 12t...
The Alphonsine Tables were astronomical tables designed to anticipate the positions of planets, luna...
This article examines an unstudied set of astronomical tables for the meridian of Cambridge, also kn...
International audienceManuscript Escorial O II 10 is a late 13th-century document containing a well-...
This work is proposing an archaeo-astronomical study of the Julian calendar, a reform of the Roman ...
The article introduces a previously unknown fourteenth-century treatise on computus and calendrical ...
The main goal of this work is to describe calendars of various countries, and that both calendars, w...
During the 16th century the disagreement between the dates of the Julian calendar, that had been in ...
The development of Astronomy in the Middle Ages is closely intertwined with the interests of the Chu...
On 24 February 1582, Pope Gregory XIII issued a Bull, inter gravissimas, initiating the reform of th...
It was on the first of January 45 BC when calendar reform instigated by Julius Caesar came into forc...
Among the works by Jean des Murs that have yet to be printed are his Canones tabularum Alfonsii, whi...
This article presents an edition and brief analysis of the previously overlooked text De composition...
This article is dedicated to the obscure Computus of Magister Cunestabulus (England, 1175), which of...
The common era calendar was a calendar from the ancient Roman calendar that uses lunar system that J...
Includes bibliographical references (pages li-lxi) and indexes.Three computistic writings of the 12t...
The Alphonsine Tables were astronomical tables designed to anticipate the positions of planets, luna...
This article examines an unstudied set of astronomical tables for the meridian of Cambridge, also kn...
International audienceManuscript Escorial O II 10 is a late 13th-century document containing a well-...
This work is proposing an archaeo-astronomical study of the Julian calendar, a reform of the Roman ...