N. 99241824

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David Origanus - ASTRONOMY PRESENTATION COPY Ephemerides novae annorum XXXVI - 1599
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David Origanus - ASTRONOMY PRESENTATION COPY Ephemerides novae annorum XXXVI - 1599

Post-Copernican powerhouse: Origanus’s 1599 Landeck-inscribed Presentation Copy—first edition, two parts in one. Later owned by Owen Gingerich, Harvard astronomer and historian of science. THE BOOK David Origanus (David Tost) — Ephemerides novae annorum XXXVI, incipientes ab anno 1595 … & desinentes in annum 1630 (Frankfurt an der Oder: Typis Andreae Eichornii, 1599). Two parts in one stout 4to; a large well preserved folding table. Dated 1599 author’s presentation copy, first edition, complete, very rare. MOUSEION CURATOR NOTE “Historians count Origanus among the core ephemeridists of the early seventeenth century; few copies make that history so tangible. This one is an author’s presentation, dated Landecae, 27 June 1599, carrying the book from the Viadrina press straight into his Silesian circle—from a correspondent of Kepler to a later home in Owen Gingerich’s library. With its folding proportional table and eclipse schemata, it is not only a computational tool but a document of practice whose provenance is genuinely unique.” DESCRIPTION First edition—extremely rare and completely scarce in commerce. Two parts in one volume; title-page with a three-line presentation inscription in the author’s hand (signed “Origanus,” Landecae, 27 June 1599). A powerhouse of the post-Copernican era, enabling observation, underwriting astrology, structuring time-reckoning, and guiding calendar reform. Origanus’s Ephemerides novae provides daily geocentric longitudes and latitudes of Sun, Moon, and planets for 1595–1630, computed ex hypothesibus Copernici with the Prutenic canon, and referred to the Frankfurt-an-der-Oder meridian. The Introductio sets constants and procedures (calendar handling, meridian time, sexagesimal units) and includes a large Tabula proportionalis motus diurni Planetarum for hourly interpolation (“pro investigando ad quodvis tempus”). Part II adds the accidentia motus—stations, retrogradations, visibilities, and conjunctions—and a full eclipse program (“eclipsium omnium supra & infra terram accuratam descriptionem”) with schemata, contact times, and magnitudes. Together, these sections form a complete computational toolkit bridging method and tables: parameters, interpolation, phenomena, eclipses. Designed for operational use in observation, astrology, time-reckoning, and calendar work. The eclipse schemata and vernal-ingress chart visualize a culture where astronomical computation and judicial astrology still spoke to each other. Origanus stood in the same network of practitioners who fed the Keplerian revolution, and he corresponded directly with Kepler. AUTHOR’S PRESENTATION COPY Diplomatic translation: “To the most distinguished gentleman Basil Habelius of Glatz, the most faithful Notary of Landeck, his friend—old and very dear—as a pledge of constant and sincere friendship the Author gave this book at Landeck, 27 June 1599.” This localizes the book in Silesia within weeks of publication, mapping Origanus’s home network and giving a rare time-and-place stamp for a working ephemeris. PROVENANCE Author’s presentation, signed and dated as above (a1r). Owen Gingerich (1930–2023), renowned astronomer & historian of science at Harvard;(Gingerich’s scholarship on ephemerides and the Rudolphine Tables gives this association special resonance.) MOUSEION CURATOR NOTE “An author’s gift become an historian’s tool: Origanus presents the book in 1599, and centuries later Gingerich preserves it. Between those points lie the folding table, eclipse diagrams, and a career in correspondence with Kepler—an ephemeris with a biography.” CONDITION REPORT very good: clean, complete, and crisp throughout, with even toning, wide margins, strong impressions of type and woodcuts, and the large folding Tabula proportionalis present and intact, tables and eclipse diagrams remain strong and legible. Binding: Late-18th-century gilt calf, red edges; gilt bright; headcap losses, joints rubbed with beginning cracks; corners rounded; A credible working scholarly binding. 4°; a–b⁸ A–Z⁸ a–c⁸ d⁴; (:)⁶ A–Z⁸ Aa–Zz⁸ Aaa–Zzz⁸ 4A–4C⁸; [16], 424 pp.; Part II [582] ll.; full-page portraits (dedicatee in Part I; author in Part II), arms, large folding table, numerous diagrams. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION This title was listed on the Roman Index (1603), donec corrigatur—evidence that even numerical tables could carry confessional risk. Astronomical program. The 1599 ephemerides operationalize the Copernican/Prutenic constants while remaining compatible with contemporary practice (mixed calendrical regimes; local meridian preference). Kepler connection. Beyond the EMLO-listed 8 Aug. 1605 letter, the technical literature cites further exchange in 1609 (KGW 16); the conversation orbits accuracy limits of the Prutenics and the search for better parameters — precisely the pressure that culminated in Kepler’s Rudolphine Tables.

N. 99241824

Non più disponibile
David Origanus - ASTRONOMY PRESENTATION COPY Ephemerides novae annorum XXXVI - 1599

David Origanus - ASTRONOMY PRESENTATION COPY Ephemerides novae annorum XXXVI - 1599

Post-Copernican powerhouse: Origanus’s 1599 Landeck-inscribed Presentation Copy—first edition, two parts in one. Later owned by Owen Gingerich, Harvard astronomer and historian of science.

THE BOOK

David Origanus (David Tost) — Ephemerides novae annorum XXXVI, incipientes ab anno 1595 … & desinentes in annum 1630 (Frankfurt an der Oder: Typis Andreae Eichornii, 1599).
Two parts in one stout 4to; a large well preserved folding table. Dated 1599 author’s presentation copy, first edition, complete, very rare.

MOUSEION CURATOR NOTE

“Historians count Origanus among the core ephemeridists of the early seventeenth century; few copies make that history so tangible. This one is an author’s presentation, dated Landecae, 27 June 1599, carrying the book from the Viadrina press straight into his Silesian circle—from a correspondent of Kepler to a later home in Owen Gingerich’s library. With its folding proportional table and eclipse schemata, it is not only a computational tool but a document of practice whose provenance is genuinely unique.”

DESCRIPTION

First edition—extremely rare and completely scarce in commerce. Two parts in one volume; title-page with a three-line presentation inscription in the author’s hand (signed “Origanus,” Landecae, 27 June 1599).

A powerhouse of the post-Copernican era, enabling observation, underwriting astrology, structuring time-reckoning, and guiding calendar reform.

Origanus’s Ephemerides novae provides daily geocentric longitudes and latitudes of Sun, Moon, and planets for 1595–1630, computed ex hypothesibus Copernici with the Prutenic canon, and referred to the Frankfurt-an-der-Oder meridian. The Introductio sets constants and procedures (calendar handling, meridian time, sexagesimal units) and includes a large Tabula proportionalis motus diurni Planetarum for hourly interpolation (“pro investigando ad quodvis tempus”).

Part II adds the accidentia motus—stations, retrogradations, visibilities, and conjunctions—and a full eclipse program (“eclipsium omnium supra & infra terram accuratam descriptionem”) with schemata, contact times, and magnitudes. Together, these sections form a complete computational toolkit bridging method and tables: parameters, interpolation, phenomena, eclipses. Designed for operational use in observation, astrology, time-reckoning, and calendar work.

The eclipse schemata and vernal-ingress chart visualize a culture where astronomical computation and judicial astrology still spoke to each other.

Origanus stood in the same network of practitioners who fed the Keplerian revolution, and he corresponded directly with Kepler.

AUTHOR’S PRESENTATION COPY

Diplomatic translation:
“To the most distinguished gentleman Basil Habelius of Glatz, the most faithful Notary of Landeck, his friend—old and very dear—as a pledge of constant and sincere friendship the Author gave this book at Landeck, 27 June 1599.”

This localizes the book in Silesia within weeks of publication, mapping Origanus’s home network and giving a rare time-and-place stamp for a working ephemeris.

PROVENANCE

Author’s presentation, signed and dated as above (a1r).

Owen Gingerich (1930–2023), renowned astronomer & historian of science at Harvard;(Gingerich’s scholarship on ephemerides and the Rudolphine Tables gives this association special resonance.)

MOUSEION CURATOR NOTE

“An author’s gift become an historian’s tool: Origanus presents the book in 1599, and centuries later Gingerich preserves it. Between those points lie the folding table, eclipse diagrams, and a career in correspondence with Kepler—an ephemeris with a biography.”

CONDITION REPORT

very good: clean, complete, and crisp throughout, with even toning, wide margins, strong impressions of type and woodcuts, and the large folding Tabula proportionalis present and intact, tables and eclipse diagrams remain strong and legible.

Binding: Late-18th-century gilt calf, red edges; gilt bright; headcap losses, joints rubbed with beginning cracks; corners rounded; A credible working scholarly binding.

4°; a–b⁸ A–Z⁸ a–c⁸ d⁴; (:)⁶ A–Z⁸ Aa–Zz⁸ Aaa–Zzz⁸ 4A–4C⁸; [16], 424 pp.; Part II [582] ll.; full-page portraits (dedicatee in Part I; author in Part II), arms, large folding table, numerous diagrams.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

This title was listed on the Roman Index (1603), donec corrigatur—evidence that even numerical tables could carry confessional risk.

Astronomical program. The 1599 ephemerides operationalize the Copernican/Prutenic constants while remaining compatible with contemporary practice (mixed calendrical regimes; local meridian preference).

Kepler connection. Beyond the EMLO-listed 8 Aug. 1605 letter, the technical literature cites further exchange in 1609 (KGW 16); the conversation orbits accuracy limits of the Prutenics and the search for better parameters — precisely the pressure that culminated in Kepler’s Rudolphine Tables.

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