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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Manuscript Sources

There are four holograph copies of in Sole visa. The fijirst draft—67 fols. Add.9320. The second draft—72 fols. Add.9320. The second draft in a neater hand—72 fols. RGO. Flamsteed vol. 76. The fijinal draft—58 fols. RGO. Flamsteed vol. 68C. Horrocks, Jeremiah, Philosophicall Exercises and Astronomicall Exercises, R.G.O. Flamsteed, vol. 68B. All are in Royal Greenwich Observatory papers, Cambridge University Library.

Printed Sources

Brahe, Tycho, Opera omnia, ed. J. L. E. Dreyer (Copenhagen, 1913–1929). Copernicus, Nicolaus, De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (Nuremburg, 1543). Flamsteed, John, The Correspondence of , ed. Eric C. Forbes, Lesley Murdin and Frances Willmoth (Bristol: Institute of Physics, 2000–2002). ——, The Gresham Lectures of John Flamsteed, ed. Eric C. Forbes (London: Mansell, 1975). Galilei, Galileo, Dialogo in Latin translation (Holland, 1635). ——, Discoveries and Opinions of Galileo, trans. Stillman Drake (Garden City, NY: Double- day, 1957). ——, Sidereus nuncius, trans. Albert van Helden (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989). Gassendi, Pierre, Epistolica exercitatio (Paris, 1630). Horrocks, Jeremiah, Opera posthuma, ed. (London, 1673, 1678). ——, Venus in Sole Visa, in Johannis Hevelii, Mercurius in Sole visus Gedani. . . . (Gdansk, 1662), 111–45. ——, The Over the Sun: Or An Astronomical Treatise on the Celebrated Conjunction of Venus and the sun on the 24th of November, 1639, in The Transit of Venus across the Sun: A Translation of the Celebrated Discourse Thereupon. . . . by Arundell B. Whatton (London: Macintosh, [1859], 109–216. Huygens, Christiaan, Oeuvres complètes de (La Haye, 1888–1950). Kepler, Johannes, Gesammelte Werke, ed. Max Caspar et al. (München: C. H. Beck, 1937–). ——, Kepler’s Conversation with Galileo’s Sidereal Messenger, trans. Edward Rosen (New York and London: Johnson Reprint Corp., 1965). ——, Epitome of Copernican : Books IV and V, trans. Charles G. Wallis, in Great books of the Western World, vol 16, (Chicago: Encylopedia Britannica, 1952). ——, Optics: Paralipomena to Witelo & Optical Part of Astronomy, trans. William H. Dona- hue (Santa Fe: Green Lion Press, 2000). Mercator, Gerardus, Atlas minor (Amsterdam, 1610). Newton, Isaac, The Correspondence of , ed. H. W. Turnbull, J. F. Scott, A. R. Hall, and Laura Tilling, 7 vols. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1959–1977). Rigaud, Stephen P. and Stephen J, eds. Correspondence of Scientifijic Men of the Seventeenth Century, Vol. 2 (Oxford U. Press, 1641). Schickard, Wilhelm, Pars responsi ad epistolas P. Gassendi . . . de Mercurio sub sole viso et alijs novitatibus uranicis (Tübingen, 1632). Van Lansberge, Philip, Tabulae motuum coelestium perpetuae (Middelburg, 1632). 78 bibliography

Wing, Vincent, Astronomia Britannica (London, 1669). Worthington, John, The Diary and Correspondence of Dr. John Worthington, ed. James Cross- ley and Richard Copley, in Remains Historical and Literary, Connected with the Palatine Counties of and Chester, vols. 13, 36, 114 (Chetham Society, 1847–1886).

Secondary Sources

Applebaum, Wilbur, “Between Kepler and Newton: The Celestial Dynamics of Jeremiah Horrocks,” Proceedings of the XIIIth International Congress of the History of Science, Mos- cow, August 18–24, 1972 (Moscow, 1974), vol. 4, 292–99. ——, “Jeremiah Horrocks,” New Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), vol. 28, 178–80. —— and Robert A. Hatch, “Boulliau, Mercator and Horrocks’s ‘Venus in Sole visa’: Three Unpublished Letters,” Journal for the History of Astronomy, XIV (1983), 166–79. Ariew, Roger, “The Phases of Venus before 1610,” Studies in the History and 18 (1987), 81–92. Astrophilus, “History of the Transit of Venus in 1639,” Gentleman’s Magazine XXXI (May 1761), 222–25. This letter to the editor was doubtless written in anticipation of the transit of Venus due the following month. The pseudonymous Astrophilus recounts in popular, but accurate form, Horrocks’s method and procedure for his observation. ——, “An Account of Mr. Horrox’s Observation of the Transit of Venus over the Sun, in the Year 1639,” The Annual Register, Society of Canada, 9 (1915), 271–84. Aughton, Peter, The Transit of Venus: The Brief, Brilliant Life of Jeremiah Horrocks, Father of British Astronomy (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2004). Barocas, V., “Jeremiah Horrocks (1619–1642), Journal of the British Astronomical Association, 79 (1968–69), 223–26. Brack, Alan, “Venus Observed,” ‘68/Issue 16, 1–5. Brickel, Robert, The Transits of Venus, 1639–1784, or, A Chapter of Romance in Science: In Memoriam Horroccii (Preston: H. Oakey, 1874). Busard, H. L. L., “Philip van Lansberge,” Dictionary of Scientifijic Biography, ed. Charles C. Gillispie (New York: Scribner’s, 1970–1980), VIII, 27–28. Bushell, W. F., “Jeremiah Horrocks: The Keats of English Astronomy,” Mathematical Gazette 43 (1959), 1–16. Cassini, Jacques D., “Observation de Venus sur le disque du soleil, par Horoccius,” Elemens d’Astronomie (Paris, 1740), 550–60. Chapman, Allan, “Jeremiah Horrocks and the Transit of Venus of 1639,” Astronomy Now, 3 (1989), 23–26. ——, “Jeremiah Horrocks, the Transit of Venus, and the ‘New Astronomy’ in Early Seven- teenth-Century England,” Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society, 31 (1990), 333–57. Davis, Betty M., The Astronomical Work of Jeremiah Horrocks University of London MSc. thesis, 1967. Delambre, Jean B. J., Histoire de l’astronomie moderne (Paris, 1821), II, 493–514. Dodgson, G. Stanley, “Jeremiah Horrocks and the Transit of Venus,” Journals and Transac- tions of the Leeds Astronomical Society, 7 (1899), 25–31. Gaythorpe, Sidney B., “Horrocks’s Observation of the Transit of Venus 1639 November 24 (O.S.),” Journal of the British Astronomical Association 47 (1936), 60–68, and vol. 64 (1954), 309–15. ——, “Jeremiah Horrocks: Date of Birth, Parentage and Family Associations,” Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, 106 (1954), 23–33. Gingerich, Owen, “Was Horrocks a Curate? A Tangled Bibliographic Ramble,” Journal for the History of Astronomy 36 (2005), 231–32. Goldstein, Bernard R., “Some Medieval Reports of Venus and Mercury Transits,” Centaurus XIV (1969).