: Nick Kanas
: Star Maps History, Artistry, and Cartography
: Praxis
: 9780387716695
: 1
: CHF 24.40
:
: Astronomie
: English
: 382
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

The beauty and awe generated by the celestial void captures our imagination and delights our aesthetic sense. Antiquarian map societies are prospering, and celestial maps are now viewed as a specialty of map collecting. This book traces the history of celestial cartography and relates this history to the changing ideas of man's place in the universe and to advances in map-making. Photographs from actual antiquarian celestial atlases and prints, many previously unpublished, enrich the text. The book describes the development and relationships between different sky maps and atlases as well as demonstrating contemporary cosmological ideas, constellation representations, and cartographic advances.



Nick Kanas, M.D., is Professor of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco. He has been a member of the San Francisco Amateur Astronomers since 1978 and has collected and researched antiquarian celestial books, atlases, and prints for nearly 25 years. He is a member of several map collector societies and has lectured on the history of celestial cartography at scientific and non-scientific meetings of organizations such as the Sydney (Australia) Observatory, the 20th International Conference on the History of Cartography, and the California Map Society. He also has written articles on this subject for a number of journals and magazines, including Sky& Telescope, Mercury, Imago Mundi, Mercator's World, and the Journal of the International Map Collectors' Society. Professor Kanas has written over 160 professional articles and 3 books, including, with D. Manzey, Space Psychology and Psychiatry (Kluwer/Springer, 2003), which won the 2004 International Academy of Astronautics Life Science Book Award. He also won Honorable Mention in the 2006 Boeing/Griffith Observer Science Writing Contest for his astronomy article on 'Sacrobosco's De Sphaera' (which was published in the astronomy magazine Griffith Observer, sponsored by the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles).

Contents5
Foreword14
Preface16
Figures23
Color sections28
Tables29
Abbreviations and acronyms30
1 What is a star map?31
2 Non-European cosmology and constellation development47
3 European cosmology78
4 European constellation development135
5 Early European star maps160
6 The160
6 The160
177160
7 Other important star maps of the Golden Age217
8 Special topics250
9 Mapping the stars early in America295
10 The transition to non-pictorial star maps315
Appendix A: Collecting celestial maps and prints345
Appendix B: Supplementary reference catalog352
Appendix C: Indices of major constellation atlases377
Appendix D: The British Library377
Appendix D: The British Library377
386377
Appendix E: Glossary387
Index394