Abstract

With the November issue of 2019, JHA completed its first fifty years. A cumulative index to vols. 1-40 appeared in the last issue of vol. 40 (November 2009). The index offered here covers the next ten vols. (2010-2019) and includes the research articles and research notes, but omits more ephemeral material such as book reviews. (The latter are, however, covered in the annual index in the final issue of each annual volume.)
The Astronomical Events of the Parapegma of the Antikythera Mechanism (with John H. Seiradakis, James Evans, Stella Drougou, and Kyriakos Efstathiou) 44(2), 173–A10
The Antikythera Mechanism: The Construction of the Metonic Pointer and the Back Plate Spirals (with J. H. Seiradakis, C. C. Carman, and K. Efstathiou) 45(4), 418–441
Tabula III: Kepler’s Mysterious Polyhedral Model 48(3), 281–311
An Ancient Rule for Making Portable Altitude Sundials from an ‘Unedited’ Medieval Text of the Tenth Century 42(2), 141–160
Jeanne Dumée as Astronomer and Woman in Seventeenth-Century France: The Myth and Her Lost Voice 47(3), 231–255
Astronomical Implications of Maya Hieroglyphic Notations at Xultun (with William Saturno and David Stuart) 44(1), 1–16
Refining the Astrologer’s Art: Astrological Diagrams in Bodleian MS Canon. Misc. 24 and Cardano’s Libelli Quinque (1547) 42(1), 1–25
Teach and Travel: Leiden Observatory and the Renaissance of Dutch Astronomy in the Interwar Years 41(2), 167–198
The Paradosis of the Persian Tables, A Source on Astronomy between the Ilkhanate and the Eastern Roman Empire 49(2), 239–260
Albert of Brudzewo’s Little Commentary on George Peurbach’s ‘Theoricae Novae Planetarum’ 44(2), 125–148
Historic Photographs by William and Margaret Lindsay Huggins 44(4), 481–484
On the Orientation of Ancient Egyptian Temples: (5) Testing the Theory in Middle Egypt and Sudan (with Magdi Fekri, Yasser A. Abdel-Hadi, Mosalam Shaltout, and A. César González García) 41(1) 65–93
Antiochos’s Hierothesion at Nemrud Dag Revisited: Adjusting the Date in the Light of Astronomical Evidence (with A. César González García) 41(4), 469–481
The ‘Genetic’ Analysis of Iberian Dolmens: A Test of the Idea in the Central Pyrenees (with A. César González García) 43(2), 227–231
On the Orientation of Megalithic Monuments of the Transjordan Plateau: New Clues for an Astronomical Interpretation (with A. César González García and Andrea Polcaro) 44(4), 429–455
Astronomy, Architecture, and Symbolism: The Global Project of Sneferu at Dahshur (with Giulio Magli 46(2), 173–205
See also: A. César González-García; Andrea Rodríguez-Antón
Rosse, Robinson and Rambaut: Creating a Regime of Observing at Birr Castle, 1840–1850 45(4), 400–417
Glasgow time signals (with David Clarke) 47(3), 256–293
A Critique of the Arguments for Maragha Influence on Copernicus 45(2), 183–195
Diplomacy, Patronage, and the Preface to De Revolutionibus 44(1), 75–92
The Earliest Astronomical Tables in French (c. 1271) (with Matthieu Husson) 43(3) 287–298
Messier’s Missed Discovery of Pallas in April 1779 43(2), 209–214
Was Uranus Observed by Hipparchus? 44(4), 377–387
The Mean Distances of the Sun and Commentaries on the Theorica Planetarum 42(2), 205–221
On the Pin-and-Slot Device of the Antikythera Mechanism, with a New Application to the Superior Planets (with Alan Thorndike and James Evans) 43(1), 93–116
The Final Date of the Antikythera Mechanism 48(3), 312–323
A Possible Date for Ptolemy’s Development of a Model for the Second Lunar Anomaly 50(4), 398–410
See also: James Evans; Anastasiou Magdalini; Gonzalo L. Recio
“I Still Continue Convinced”: Expecting the Great Comet of 1848 48(2), 180–206
A “Confounded Scrape”: John Herschel, Neptune, and Naming the Satellites of the Outer Solar System 50(3), 306–325
Astronomical Activity in Portugal in the Fourteenth Century (with Bernard R. Goldstein) 41(2), 199–212
Characteristics and Typologies of Medieval Astronomical Tables 43(3), 269–286
John of Murs Revisited: The Kalendarium Solis Et Lune for 1321 (with Bernard R. Goldstein) 43(4), 411–437
Computing Planetary Positions: User-Friendliness and the Alfonsine Corpus (with Bernard R. Goldstein) 44(3), 257–276
Corrigenda for this article 44(4), 479–480
A List of Stars “Correcte Cum 2 Magnis Armillis” in 1362 46(2), 206–217
The Moon in the Oxford Tables of 1348 (with Bernard R. Goldstein) 47(2), 159–167
An Early Witness of Alfonsine Astronomy: The London Tables for 1336 48(3), 324–328
Adaptations of the Oxford Tables to Paris, Mantua, and Louvain (with Bernard R. Goldstein) 49(1), 99–115
The Master and the Disciple: The Almanac of John of Lignères and the Ephemerides of John of Saxony (with Bernard R. Goldstein) 50(1), 82–96
Tracing Ramsden’s ‘Plumbline Level’ (with Donatella Randazzo) 42(2), 161–176
Nineteenth-Century Comets: Studies and Observations in Sicily 46(2), 130–158
The Orientation of Danish Passage Graves on the Islands of Samsø and Zealand (with Per Kjærgaard and Ole Einicke) 42(3), 339–351
Ancient Egyptian Diagonal Star Tables: A New Fragment, and Updates for S16C and S1C (with Sarah L. Symons) 45(2), 197–208
See also: Sarah Symons
The Historical Meridian: Antiquity and Scripture in the Public Work of George Biddell Airy 49(2), 135–157
Hodierna’s Luminosa 8 = ψ1,2,3 Aquarii 46(3), 365–366
Where, if anywhere, did Rheita see Veronica’s Veil? 48(2), 233–237
The Book Everybody Read: Vernacular Translations of Sacrobosco’s Sphere in the Sixteenth Century (with Ashley Nicole McCray, Leila McNeill, Amy Rodgers, and Blair Stein) 46(1), 4–28
Giuseppe Piazzi: The Controversial Discovery and Loss of Ceres in 1801 (with Brian G. Marsdenand Wayne Orchiston) 42(3), 283–306
Olbers’s Planetary Explosion Hypothesis: Genesis and Early Nineteenth-Century Interpretations (with Wayne Orchiston) 44(2),187–205
On the Field Testing of Methods the Egyptians May Have Used to Find Cardinal Directions 46(3), 351–364
Kepler’s Archetypes: How They Increased the Scale of the Universe 43(4), 491–496
The Geometrical Root of the Area-Measure of Time (From Kepler’s Astronomia nova) 46(3), 297–324
An early English astrolabe at Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge, and Walter of Elveden’s Kalendarium (with Michael Lowne) 46(3), 257–290
A Royal English Medieval Astrolabe Made for Use in Northern Italy 48(1), 3–32
The “Chaucerian” Astrolabe in the British Museum: A Reassessment of Its Dating and Ownership 50(2), 121–154
Los phisicos modernos quasi todos son copernicanos: Copernicanism and its Discontents in Colonial Río De La Plata 48(2), 160–179
Babylonian Observations of Venus: Arcus Visionis, Atmospheric Extinction and Observational Practice 43(4), 391–409
When to Send Your Telescope Aloft 50(3), 265–305
Variations Within The Fortin-Flamsteed Atlas of 1776: Taurus Poniatowski 46(1), 29–47
An Initial Assessment of the Accuracy of the Gear Trains in the Antikythera Mechanism 42(3), 307–320
The Parallel Worlds of Christoph Scheiner and Galileo Galilei (with Jack B. Zirker) 47(3), 332–345
Solar Anomaly and Planetary Displays in the Antikythera Mechanism (with C. C. Carman and A.S. Thorndike) 41(1), 1–39
A Note from the Editor 46(1), 3–3
See also: Magdalini Anastasiou, Christián C. Carman
Paris 1676: The Discovery of the Velocity of Light and the Roles of Rømer and Cassini 50(4), 456–475
Introduction
See also: Elisabeth Leedham-Green
From the Borders of Russia to the Capital of China: Russian Astronomical Researches in China in the Nineteenth Century (with Natalia M. Vekshina) 48(4), 417–431
The Nakovana Zodiac: Fragments of an Astrologer’s Board from an Illyrian-Hellenistic Cave Sanctuary (with Alexander Jones) 42(4), 25–438
Directions of Obscuration in Babylonian Eclipse Records 43(4), 479–489
On the Babylonian Sighting-Criterion for the Lunar Crescent and its Implications for Egyptian Lunar Data 45(1), 79–90
By How Much Did Le Verrier Err on the Position of Neptune? 46(1), 48–65
How Galileo Constructed the Moons of Jupiter (with Albert van Helden) 42(2), 259–264
Transits in the Seventeenth Century and the Credentialling of Keplerian Astronomy 44(3), 303–312
Planetary Velocities and the Astrological Month (with José Chabás) 44(4), 465–478
Ibn al-Ḥadib’s Tables for Finding True Syzygy (with José Chabás) 50(4), 428–446
See also: José Chabás
Statistical Analysis of Megalithic Tomb Orientations in the Iberian Peninsula and Neighbouring Regions (with Juan Antonio Belmonte) 41(2) 225–238
Thinking Hattusha: Astronomy and Landscape in the Hittite Lands (with Juan Antonio Belmonte) 42(4), 461–494
On the Orientation of Prehistoric Sardinian Monuments: A Comparative Statistical Approach (with Mauro Zedda and Juan Antonio Belmonte) 45(4), 467–481
See also: Juan Antonio Belmonte; Andrea Rodríguez-Antón
Petrus Apianus Draws up a Calendar 42(1), 55–72
After the Nova of 1604: Roeslin and Kepler’s Discussion on the Significance of the Celestial Novelties (1607–1613) 42(3), 353–390
Michael Maestlin and His Unpublished Treatise on the Nova of 1604 4(1), 91–122
The Telescope against Copernicus: Star Observations by Riccioli Supporting a Geocentric Universe 41(4), 453–467
Science Rather Than God: Riccioli’s Review of the Case for and against the Copernican Hypothesis 43(2), 215–225
Stars as the Armies of God: Lansbergen’s Incorporation of Tycho Brahe’s Star-Size Argument into the Copernican Theory 44(2), 165–172
How to Make the Earth Orbit the Sun in 1614 50(1), 16–30
The Starry Universe of Johannes Kepler 50(2), 155–173
Michael Maestlin’s Mystery: Theory Building with Diagrams 43(1), 57–73
The First Copernican Astrologer: Andreas Aurifaber’s Practica for 1541 41(2), 157–165
Echoes from the Pulpit: A Preacher against Galileo’s Astronomy (1610–1615) 43(4), 377–389
The Herschel Knighthoods: Facts and Fiction (with Michael Hoskin) 44(2), 149–164
Calendar Structures for Venus in Mesoamerican Divinatory Books: Common Approaches to Commensuration and Correction 46(4), 387–412
Sirius B and the Measurement of the Gravitational Redshift 41(1), 41–64
Mary Herschel’s Fortune: Origins and Impact 41(2), 213–223
William Herschel and the Southern Skies 41(4), 503–503
William Herschel and the Nebulae, Part 1: 1774–1784 42(2), 177–192
William Herschel and the Nebulae, Part 2: 1785–1818 42(3), 321–338
William Herschel’s Residence in Bath, 1799–1801 43(3), 351–358
William Herschel’s Agenda for His Son John 43(4), 439–454
William Herschel and The Planetary Nebulae 45(2), 209–225
William Herschel and God 45(2), 247–252
Avete atque Valete 45(4), 397–399
Caroline Herschel’s Life of “Mortifications and Disappointments” 45(4), 442–466
William Herschel’s Yorkshire Years 46(2), 159–172
Herschel Telescopes for Sale 46(3), 291–296
William Herschel’s Application for a Coat of Arms 47(2), 210–213
Harlow Shapley: The Making of an Observatory Director 47(3), 317–331
See also: Andrew Hanham; Andreas Maurer
Ways to Read a Table: Reading and Interpolation Techniques in Canons of Early Fourteenth-Century Double-Argument Tables 43(3), 299–319
See also: Jean-Patrice Boudet, Richard L. Kremer
Critical Editing of Early-Modern Astronomical Diagrams (with Nicholas Jardine) 41(3), 393–414
Introduction: Forms and Functions of Early Modern Celestial Imagery (with Renée Raphael) 41(3), 283–286
Johann Baptist Hebenstreit’s Idyll on the Temple of Urania, the Frontispiece Image of Kepler’s Rudolphine Tables, Part 1: Context and Significance (with Elisabeth Leedham-Green and Christopher Lewis) 45(1), 1–19
Kepler = Koestler: On Empathy and Genre in the History of the Sciences 45(3), 271–286
See also: Isla Fay; Boris Jardine; Elisabeth Leedham-Green
Wren, Hooke and Graphical Practice 41(3), 381–392
Theon of Alexandria’s Observation of the Solar Eclipse of A.D. 364 June 16 43(1), 117–118
Unruly Sun: Solar Tables and Calculations in the Papyrus P. Fouad 267 A 47(1),76–99
See also: Stašo Forenbaher
Comet 27 P/Crommelin Observed in Ancient Korea (with Kim Jik-Su, Kim Chol-Jun and Choe Chol-Min) 50(4), 447–455
Twentieth-Century Longitude: When Greenwich Moved 50(2), 221–248
The Candrārkī of Dinakara: A Text Related to Solar and Lunar Tables (with Clemency Montelle, Jambugahapitiye Dhammaloka, Keshav Melnad, K. Mahesh, Pravesh Vyas, K. Ramasubramanian, M.S. Sriram, and Venketeswara Pai) 49(3), 306–344
Karl Popper on Physical Cosmologies 43(3), 347–350
The Nobel Prize System and the Astronomical Sciences 48(2), 257–280
Calculating with Andreas Aurifaber: A New Source for Copernican Astronomy in 1540 41(4), 483–502
Experimenting with Paper Instruments in Fifteenth-and Sixteenth-Century Astronomy: Computing Syzygies with Isotemporal Lines and Salt Dishes 42(2), 223–258
Introduction (to special section on Astronomical Tables in Late Medieval Europe, with Matthieu Husson) 43(3), 267–267
Marcus Schinnagel’s Winged Polyptych of 1489: Astronomical Computation in a Liturgical Format 43(3),321–345
See also: Jarosław Włodarczyk
muluz3, mul dGula, and the Early History of Mesopotamian Constellations 50(3), 339–359
Andreas Nolthius’s Almanach for 1575 42(1), 91–110
The Milky Way in Johann Bayer’s Uranometria, 1603 45(2), 161–181
More Light on the Flamsteed Numbers 48(3), 346–353
Johann Baptist Hebenstreit’s Idyll on the Temple of Urania, the Frontispiece Image of Kepler’s Rudolphine Tables, Part 2: Annotated Translation (with Nicholas Jardine, Christopher Lewis, and Isla Fay) 45(1), 21–34
See also: Nicholas Jardine
New Astronomy in Service of Old Astrology: Close Planetary Conjunctions in Pre-Modern China 50(4), 411–427
A Medieval Planetary Diagram in Graz University Library (with Sonja Draxler) 43(2), 141–149
Centre, Circle, Circumference: Giordano Bruno’s Astronomical Woodcuts 41(3), 311–327
Archaeoastronomy and Refraction Near the Earth’s Surface 48(3), 329–345
Corrigendum for this article 48(4), 497
Isaac Roberts, E. E. Barnard and the Nebulae 41(2), 239–259
“Solar Spot Mania”: The Origins and Early Years of Solar Research at Kew Observatory, 1852–1860 46(4), 469–490
OSCURAUIT SOL: Stone Engravings and Other Contemporary Spanish Records for the A.D. 1239 and A.D. 1354 Eclipses and Their Astronomical Implications (with Francisco J. Marco Castillo and Loli Ibáñez) 47(1), 61–75
A Survey of Meteoric Activity over Spain during the Eighth–Fifteenth Centuries (with Francisco J. Marco Castillo) 47(2), 168–193
A Review of the Dall’Olmo Survey of Meteors, Meteor Showers and Meteorites in the Middle Ages from Medieval European Sources (with Francisco J. Marco Castillo) 48(1), 62–120
Occultation of Planets by the Moon in European Narrative Medieval Sources (with Francisco J. Marco Castillo) 50(2), 192–220
William Herschel’s Planned 30-FT Reflector 44(2), 211–212
William Herschel’s Russian Telescopes (with Vasily Belokurov and Michael Hoskin) 47(1), 52–60
Vincenzo Maria Coronelli’s Atlante Veneto and the Diagrammatic Tradition of Cosmography 42(1), 27–53
On the Provenance of a Prague Copy of Copernicus’s De Revolutionibus 45(2), 243–246
The Almagest Greek and Roman Occultations Re-Visited (with Catherine Y. Hohenkerk and F. Richard Stephenson) 48(4), 405–416
On the Eclipse of Hipparchus (with F. Richard Stephenson and Catherine Y. Hohenkerk) 50(1), 3–15
Rome and the Total Solar Eclipse of BC 188 July 17 (with F.R. Stephenson and C.Y. Hohenkerk) 50(3), 366–372
See also: F. Richard Stephenson
Bīrūnī’s Four-Point Method for Determining the Eccentricity and the Direction of the Apsidal Lines of the Superior Planets 44(2), 207–211
Limitations of Methods: The Accuracy of the Values Measured for the Earth’s/Sun’s Orbital Elements in the Middle East, A.D. 800–1500, Part 1 44(3), 313–336
Limitations of Methods: The Accuracy of the Values Measured for the Earth’s/Sun’s Orbital Elements in the Middle East, A.D. 800–1500, Part 2 44(4), 89–411
Bīrūnī’s Examination of the Path of the Centre of the Epicycle in Ptolemy’s Lunar Model 45(1), 123–127
A Medieval Bright Star Table: The Non-Ptolemaic Star Table in the Īlkhānī Zīj 47(3), 294–316
The Orbital Elements of Venus in Medieval Islamic Astronomy: Interaction Between Traditions and the Accuracy of Observations 50(1), 46–81
How to Craft Telescopic Observation in a Book: Hevelius’s Selenographia (1647) and its Images 41(3), 355–379
Tribute to an Astronomer: The Work of Max Ernst on Wilhelm Tempel 47(2), 115–135
The Orientations of the Giza Pyramids and Associated Structures (with Clive Ruggles) 45(3), 304–360
Tycho Brahe, Abū Macshar, and the comet beyond Venus (ninth century A.D.) (with Paul Kunitzsch, Markus Mugrauer, Daniela Luge and Rob van Gent) 47(2), 136–158
Arabic Reports about Supernovae 1604 and 1572 in Rawḥ al-Rūḥ by cĪsā b. Luṭf Allāh from Yemen (with Wafiq Rada, Paul Kunitzsch, and Dagmar L. Neuhäuser) 47(4), 359–374
The Reception and Application of Arabic Science in Twelfth-Century Computistics: New Evidence from Bavaria 45(1), 35–60
John of Pulchro Rivo and John of Saxony: A Mise au Point 45(2), 227–242
Critical Analysis of The Alfonsine Tables in the Fourteenth Century: The Parisian Expositio Tabularum Alfonsii of 1347 46(1), 76–99
The Astronomical Data in the Très Riches Heures and their Fourteenth-Century Source| 46(2), 113–129
David Origanus’s Planetary System (1599 and 1609) 42(4), 439–454
The Post-Copernican Reception of Ptolemy: Erasmus Reinhold’s Commented Edition of the Almagest, Book One (Wittenberg, 1549) (with Irina Tupikova) 44(3), 235–256
The Scientific Culture of the Baltic Mathematician, Physician, and Calendar-Maker Laurentius Eichstadt (1596–1660) 48(2), 135–159
The Astronomical Diagrams in Oronce Finé’s Protomathesis (1532): Founding a French Tradition? 41(3), 287–310
The First Phases of the Theoricæ Planetarum Printed Tradition (1474–1535): The Evolution of a Genre Observed through its Images 43(1), 3–26
Simon Marius’s Mundus Iovialis: 400th Anniversary in Galileo’s Shadow 46(2), 218–234
The Selenographia of William Gilbert: His Pre-Telescopic Map of the Moon and His Discovery of Lunar Libration 42(2), 193–203
Ibn al-Shāṭir and Copernicus: The Uppsala Notes Revisited 47(4), 395–415
Popularizing Astronomy in the German Free Religious Movement, 1851–1852 47(1), 30–51
A Non-Astronomical Image in an Astronomical Text: Visualizing Motion in Riccioli’s Almagestum Novum 42(1), 73–90
Copernicanism in the Classroom: Jesuit Natural Philosophy and Mathematics after 1633 46(4), 419–440
See also: Nicholas Jardine
On the Equant Point for the Planets and the Moon (with Christián C. Carman) 49(4), 401–424
David Gill FRS (1843–1914): The Making of a Royal Astronomer 49(1), 3–26
Research on Asteroids of Christian Ludwig Gerling and His Students in the Nineteenth Century (with Andreas Schrimpf) 49(1), 83–98
Astrology With New Eyes: The Telescope in Astrological Prognostication (with Henrique Leitão) 49(3), 345–362
The Córdoba Observatory and the History of the ‘Personal Equation’ (1871–1886) 44(3), 277–301
Astronomy in Roman Urbanism: A Statistical Analysis of the Orientation of Roman Towns in the Iberian Peninsula (with Antonio César González-García and Juan Antonio Belmonte) 49(3), 363–387
A Treatise on the Construction of Astrolabes by Jacob ben Abi Abraham Isaac al-Corsuno (Barcelona, 1378): Edition, Translation and Commentary 49(1), 27–82
Isaac Newton’s Historia Cometarum and the Quest for Elliptical Orbits 41(4), 425–451
Al-Asfī’s Description of the Zāwiya Nasiriyya: The Use of Buildings as Astronomical Tools (with Roser Puig-Aguilar) 46(3), 325–342
Making Telescopes and Partying with the Stars: Amateur Astronomy in Spain during Franco’s Dictatorship 47(2), 194–209
Ibn Isḥāq and the Alfonsine Tables 50(3), 360–365
The Thousand Star Magnitudes in the Catalogues of Ptolemy, Al Sufi, and Tycho are All Corrected for Atmospheric Extinction 44(1), 47–A91
The Bombay Case: Astronomers, Instrument Makers and the East India Company 43(2), 151–180
The Scientific and Historical Value of Annotations on Astronomical Photographic Plates (with David Sliski) 47(1), 3–29
The Greek Text of Ptolemy, Almagest XIII, as Source of Book VI of Copernicus’s De Revolutionibus (with Concetta Luna) 44(4), 413–427
Trying Ursus: A Reappraisal of the Tycho-Ursus Priority Dispute 44(1), 17–46
The Geometrical Diagrams in Regiomontanus’s Edition of His Own Disputationes (c. 1475): Background, Production, and Diffusion 43(1), 27–55
Claudius Ptolemy? Pseudo-Ptolemy? The Main Source of Moses Almosnino’s Treatise on Astrolabe 46(3), 343–350
The Crossover of the Sun and the Moon (with Fernando Pimenta) 43(2), 191–208
The Search for Antediluvian Astronomy: Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Astronomers’ Conceptions of the Origins of the Science 44(3), 337–362
Kepler in the Early Historiography of Astronomy (1615–1800) 48(4), 381–404
An Early Astronomical Manuscript of Jeremiah Horrocks 42(4), 455–460
A New Scheme from Babylon for the Synodic Arc of Saturn 41(2), 261–268
An Early Compilation of Saturn Observations from Babylon 50(1), 31–45
William Herschel, Flamsteed Numbers and Harris’s Star Maps 45(3), 287–303
Investigation of Medieval European Records of Solar Eclipses 41(1), 95–104
Early Chinese Observations of Occultations of Planets by the Moon (with Joshua T. Baylis) 43(4), 455–477
The Provenance of Early Chinese Records of Large Solar Eclipses and the Determination of the Earth’s Rotation (with Leslie V. Morrison and Catherine Y. Hohenkerk) 49(4), 425–471
See also: Leslie V. Morrison
On a Newly Discovered Copy of Copernicus’ De Revolutionibus 1543 Edition 47(4), 386–394
Copernicus’s Derivation of the Heliocentric Theory from Regiomontanus’s Eccentric Models of the Second Inequality of the Superior and Inferior Planets 48(1), 33–61
An Ancient Egyptian Diagonal Star Table in Mallawi, Egypt (with Robert Cockcroft) 44(4), 457–463
Classification of Ancient Egyptian Astronomical ‘Diagrams’ 46(1), 66–75
A Catalogue of Ancient Egyptian Sundials (with Himanshi Khurana) 47(4), 375–385
See also: Robert Cockcroft
Assumptions behind Ptolemy’s Proof of the Earth’s Centrality 49(2), 196–215
The Solar Dial in the Olsztyn Castle: Its Construction and Relation to Copernicus (with Jarosław Włodarczyk) 49(2), 158–195
Research on the Motion of Mars in the Sovereign Pole System (A.D. 600) (with Qu Anjing) 48(4), 432–459
A Comparison of Chinese and Indian Solar Theories in the Sui and Early Tang Periods (Seventh–Eighth Centuries C.E.) (with Qu Anjing) 49(4), 472–495
A “Practique Discipline”? Mathematical Arts in John Blagrave’s The Mathematical Jewel (1585) 41(3), 329–353
A New Fragment of P. Fouad inv. 267A: The PSI inv. 2006 (with Jean-Luc Fournet) 47(4), 355–358
Concerning a Pointer on the Astrolabe 46(4), 413–418
Astronomia Instaurata? The Third Edition of Copernicus’s DE REVOLUTIONIBUS (Amsterdam, 1617) 43(1), 75–91
Putting a New Spin on Galaxies: Horace W. Babcock, the Andromeda Nebula, and the Dark Matter Revolution 45(2), 141–159
Much Better Than Thought: Observing with Galileo’s Telescopes 46(4), 441–468
History and Critical Analysis of Fifteenth and Sixteenth Century Nautical Tables 48(2), 207–232
Nautical Tables for Vasco da Gama, 1497–1500? 50(3), 326–338
Why Halley Did Not Discover Proper Motion and Why Cassini Did (with Marc van der Sluys) 50(4), 383–397
Conclusions from the Functional Reconstruction of the Antikythera Mechanism (with Christophoros Mouratidisand Andreas Vossinakis) 49(2), 216–238
Chinese Records of Supernovae in A.D. 1408 Revisited (with Xiaochun Sun) 47(4), 416–423
A Chinese Innovation Based on Western Methods: The Double-Epicycle Solar Model in the Lixiang kaocheng, 1722 (with Xiaochun Sun) 50(2), 174–191
From J. Winthrop, Jr, to E. E. Barnard: The Arduous Path to the First Sighting of Amalthea (with Karl Del Duchetto and René Racine) 42(2), 125–139
Libration of the Moon, Hevelius’s Theory, and its Early Reception in England 42(4), 495–519
Edward Gresham, Copernican Cosmology, and Planetary Occultations in Pre-Telescopic Astronomy (with Richard L. Kremerand Howard C. Hughes 49(3), 269–305
See also: Jacek P. Szubiakowski
The Fragment of Al-Kindī’s Lost Treatise on Observations of Halley’s Comet in A.D. 837 45(1), 61–77
The Eccentricity of the Sun: Kepler’s Novel Method of Calculation (with Giora Hon) 43(2), 181–189
Starting the Classification: New and Old Stars, and Sometimes Comets, Too 41(1), 105–116
