Amongst the many astronomical phenomena that have inspired speculation regarding their nature, the Milky Way takes a prominent position. In late antiquity, the Galaxy (from Greek gala, or milk) held pride of place in Martianus Capella"s Marriage of Philology and Mercury and in Macrobius" Commentary on the Dream of Scipio, two texts that transmitted classical astronomical knowledge to medieval Latin Europe. But these works also transmitted pagan beliefs that ecclesiastical authorities found disturbing. One such pagan idea held that the Milky Way was the celestial abode of souls, a belief that had been reported by Heraclides of Pontus, Cicero, Manilius, Numenius, Martianus Capella and Macrobius. Several strategies seemed to have evolved in th...
Introduction: Stretching across the dark night sky, not easily visible when the Moon is in the sky, ...
The Andromeda Galaxy - Messier's M31 - has an almost romantic appeal. It is the most distant object ...
The significance of Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) in the history of astronomy - or indeed the history ...
The beauty and the charm of the Milky May (MW) have been celebrated by countless poets and writers o...
At the beginning of the seventeenth century, Galileo Galilei made certain astronomical discoveries w...
Imagine yourself living 400 years ago, right before the telescope was first used by Galileo to look ...
The surviving text of Galileo Galilei’s lectures and studies on the “new star” is incomplete, fragme...
Galileo’s telescopic lunar observations, announced in Siderius Nuncius (1610), were a triumph of obs...
The Copernican question is a thread that runs through Galileo's entire research. This paper analyses...
Aakasha Ganga, Via Lactea or the Milky Way is our home in the Universe. The discovery of the telesco...
Between 1608 and 1610 the canopy of the night sky changed forever, ripped open by an object created ...
The early modern period saw the rapid development of two fundamental bodies of knowledge, astronomy ...
This treatise by Macrobius is a commentary in two books on the Somnium Scipionis narrated by Cicero ...
The history of ancient Greek and Roman astronomy can traditionally be divided into three broad perio...
The histories of astronomy and visual neuroscience share some important events. Observation of the s...
Introduction: Stretching across the dark night sky, not easily visible when the Moon is in the sky, ...
The Andromeda Galaxy - Messier's M31 - has an almost romantic appeal. It is the most distant object ...
The significance of Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) in the history of astronomy - or indeed the history ...
The beauty and the charm of the Milky May (MW) have been celebrated by countless poets and writers o...
At the beginning of the seventeenth century, Galileo Galilei made certain astronomical discoveries w...
Imagine yourself living 400 years ago, right before the telescope was first used by Galileo to look ...
The surviving text of Galileo Galilei’s lectures and studies on the “new star” is incomplete, fragme...
Galileo’s telescopic lunar observations, announced in Siderius Nuncius (1610), were a triumph of obs...
The Copernican question is a thread that runs through Galileo's entire research. This paper analyses...
Aakasha Ganga, Via Lactea or the Milky Way is our home in the Universe. The discovery of the telesco...
Between 1608 and 1610 the canopy of the night sky changed forever, ripped open by an object created ...
The early modern period saw the rapid development of two fundamental bodies of knowledge, astronomy ...
This treatise by Macrobius is a commentary in two books on the Somnium Scipionis narrated by Cicero ...
The history of ancient Greek and Roman astronomy can traditionally be divided into three broad perio...
The histories of astronomy and visual neuroscience share some important events. Observation of the s...
Introduction: Stretching across the dark night sky, not easily visible when the Moon is in the sky, ...
The Andromeda Galaxy - Messier's M31 - has an almost romantic appeal. It is the most distant object ...
The significance of Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) in the history of astronomy - or indeed the history ...