03565nam 2200445 450 991081689340332120230413145854.090-04-46451-4(CKB)4100000011978142(MiAaPQ)EBC6676506(Au-PeEL)EBL6676506(OCoLC)1252738920(EXLCZ)99410000001197814220220326d2021 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierGiuseppe Campani, "Inventor Romae," an uncommon genius /by Silvio A. Bedini ; edited by Cristiano ZanettiLeiden ;Boston :Brill,[2021]©20211 online resource (902 pages)Nuncius Series ;Volume 890-04-46010-1 Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- Scientific Editor's Note -- Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Illustrations -- Abbreviations -- Prelude -- Chapter 1 From the Umbrian Hills -- Chapter 2 Ave Roma Immortalis (1651-1655) -- Chapter 3 A Patent from the Pontiff (1655-1656) -- Chapter 4 Accusation (1657-1658) -- Chapter 5 Vindication (1657-1658) -- Chapter 6 Oscillating Bars: The Crank Lever Escapement (1657-1659) -- Chapter 7 A House Divided (1658-1660) -- Chapter 8 New Worlds (1660-1664) -- Chapter 9 The Ragguaglio (1664-1665) -- Chapter 10 Dueling Telescopes (1664-1666) -- Chapter 11 Vagarious Mercury (1664-1666) -- Chapter 12 Clockwork in a Vacuum (1663-1672) -- Chapter 13 Perpetual Quest (1660-1668) -- Chapter 14 Ventures with Time (1672-1678) -- Chapter 15 Magical Shadows (1668-1670) -- Chapter 16 Perpetuum Mobile (1668-1700) -- Chapter 17 The Esteem of Princes (1664-1705) -- Chapter 18 Eyes on the Skies (1662-1669) -- Chapter 19 Commissions from the Sun King (1669-1680) -- Chapter 20 "Fleas Large as a Man's Fist" (1686-1700) -- Chapter 21 Litigants and Legacies (1680-1710) -- Chapter 22 The Twilight Years (1700-1715) -- Chapter 23 Giuseppe's Daughters (1715-1763) -- Chapter 24 Era's End (1750-1850) -- Bibliography -- Index."The ingenious and ambitious Campani brothers--Matteo, Pier Tommaso, and Giuseppe--were at the core of thriving activity of technological and scientific innovation that involved popes, the Sun King, and other rulers of baroque Europe. Especially Giuseppe's outstanding production of innovating clocks, telescopes, and microscopes, attracted the attention of the most important scientific characters and experimental academies of the time. This posthumous book by Silvio Bedini is the result of a fifty-year-long study that will serve not just as a reference work for scholars interested in seventeenth-century clockmaking, practical optics, astronomy, and science and technology in general, but it also will provide you with unique insights into the scientific and technological landscape of baroque Rome and its links to a broader European scene. And thanks to the author's narrative and many illustrations, it will make a complex story an enjoyable read for non-specialists"--Provided by publisher.Nuncius series ;Volume 8.Clock and watch makingItalyBiographyClock and watch making681.113092Bedini Silvio A.452314Zanetti Cristiano1975-MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910816893403321Giuseppe Campani, "Inventor Romae," an uncommon genius4064010UNINA