00829nam0-22002891i-450-99000573059040332119990530000573059FED01000573059(Aleph)000573059FED0100057305919990530d1939----km-y0itay50------bafrey-------001yyBeton, bet, beterJ. JudLeipzigLibr. DrorMax Niehans1939ParisP. 194-21028 cmEstratto da MTlanges A. Duraffour romanica Helvetica, vol 14, 1939Jud,Jakob<1882-1952>185244ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990005730590403321GLOTT. A I e 26 (12)IST.GLOTT. S.I.FLFBCFLFBCBeton, bet, beter573238UNINA02791nam 22005053 450 991097807610332120250328132931.09782503595214250359521910.1484/M.ALFA-EB.5.124044(CKB)6170000000000004(MiAaPQ)EBC7176340(Au-PeEL)EBL7176340(NjHacI)996170000000000004(PPN)267533462(EXLCZ)99617000000000000420230510d2022 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierAlfonsine Astronomy The Written RecordTurnhout, Belgium :Brepols Publishers,2022.©2022.1 online resource (428 pages)Alfonsine Astronomy: Studies and Sources ;v.19782503595207 2503595200 Compiled between 1262 and 1272 in Toledo under the patronage of Alfonso X, the Castilian Alfonsine Tables were recast in Paris in the 1320s, resulting in what we now call the Parisian Alfonsine Tables. These materials circulated widely and fostered astronomical activities throughout Europe. This resulted in a significant number of new works, of which there are a few hundred, extant in more than 600 manuscript codices and dozens of printed editions. These manuscripts and imprints, broadly contemporary to the works they witness, comprise the written record of Alfonsine astronomy and provide the focus of this volume. A first series of essays examines individual manuscripts containing Alfonsine works. The authors seek to reconstruct, from the manuscript evidence, the cultural, astronomical and mathematical worlds in which the manuscripts were initially copied, compiled, used and collected. A second series of essays turns from the particular codex to the individual work or author. These contributions ask how particular works have been transmitted in surviving manuscript witnesses and how broader manuscript cultures shaped the diffusion, over two centuries, of Alfonsine astronomy across Europe. A final essay reflects on the challenges and opportunities offered by digital humanities approaches in such collective studies of a large manuscript corpus.Alfonsine Astronomy: Studies and SourcesAlfonsine AstronomyScienceHistoryScienceHistory.509Kremer Richard L1789023Husson Matthieu1370712Chabás José1789024MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910978076103321Alfonsine Astronomy4324383UNINA