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Almagest
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Almagest

Book compiled by the Egyptian astronomer Ptolemy during the 2nd century, which included the idea of an Earth-centred universe; it was translated into Arabic in the 9th century. Some medieval books on astronomy, astrology, and alchemy were given the same title.

Each of the 13 sections of the book deals with a different branch of astronomy. The introduction describes the universe as spherical and contains arguments for the Earth being stationary at the centre. From this mistaken assumption, it goes on to describe the motions of the Sun, Moon, and planets; eclipses; and the positions, brightness, and precession of the ‘fixed stars’. The book drew on the work of earlier astronomers such as Hipparchus.



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Mistaken for a star in the pre-telescopic age, Omega Centauri was labelled according to its brightness and so was given a letter by Bayer and included in his Uranometria of 1603 after it had already been catalogued by Ptolemy in the Almagest of 150AD.
The Almagest of Claudius Ptolemy was the dominant work in astronomy for over a thousand years until the publication of Copernicus's De revolutionibus in 1543.
Ptolemy, author of the Almagest, is relevant here for his Geography, a book that includes instructions on how to represent a three-dimensional world on a flat surface: a map.
 
 
 
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