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Scandalous Error

Calendar Reform and Calendrical Astronomy in Medieval Europe

By (author) C. Philipp E. Nothaft
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom
Published: 22nd Feb 2018
Dimensions: w 163mm h 241mm d 28mm
Weight: 730g
ISBN-10: 0198799551
ISBN-13: 9780198799559
Barcode No: 9780198799559
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Synopsis
The Gregorian calendar reform of 1582, which provided the basis for the civil and Western ecclesiastical calendars still in use today, has often been seen as a triumph of early modern scientific culture or an expression of papal ambition in the wake of the Counter-Reformation. Much less attention has been paid to reform's intellectual roots in the European Middle Ages, when the reckoning of time by means of calendrical cycles was a topic of central importance to learned culture, as impressively documented by the survival of relevant texts and tables in thousands of manuscripts copied before 1500. For centuries prior to the Gregorian reform, astronomers, mathematicians, theologians, and even Church councils had been debating the necessity of improving or emending the existing ecclesiastical calendar, which throughout the Middle Ages kept losing touch with the astronomical phenomena at an alarming pace. Scandalous Error is the first comprehensive study of the medieval literature devoted to the calendar problem and its cultural and scientific contexts. It examines how the importance of ordering liturgical time by means of a calendar that comprised both solar and lunar components posed a technical-astronomical problem to medieval society and details the often sophisticated ways in which computists and churchmen reacted to this challenge. By drawing attention to the numerous connecting paths that existed between calendars and mathematical astronomy between the Fall of Rome and the end of the fifteenth century, the volume offers substantial new insights on the place of exact science in medieval culture.

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Nothaft's main achievement is to demonstrate the staggering variety of approaches and rich texture of medieval conversations around the technical problems of the calendar. The thirty black-and-white illustrations give the merest hint of the masses of unedited mathematical manuscripts through which the author has sifted. * Speculum * This essential volume reworks the well-established framework of medieval computus, providing a richer understanding of the place of the calendar in medieval astronomy. It belongs in every library that collects in medieval history or the history of science. * Stephen McCluskey, Journal of the History of Astronomy *