‘Tadeas Hajek’ category posts - « Cipher Mysteries »



Carolus Clusius correspondence…

Posted by nickpelling on Nov 11th, 2008.
As regular Cipher Mysteries readers will know, I've recently become particularly interested in early modern correspondence as a way of peering into the dispersed scientific networks that began to develop and extend during the late sixteenth century (the so-called "invisible colleges"), very much along the lines described for Tycho Brahe's familia by Adam Mosley in his recent book Bearing the Heavens. However, one key problem is ...

Review of “Bearing the Heavens”…

Posted by nickpelling on Sep 30th, 2008 - 1 comment.
I've just come back from 24 hours in Swansea, a town where, bizarrely, almost every road is one way (usually the opposite way to which you want to go). At the top of Mount Pleasant, students eke out their existence, one drunken stumble away from a 5-minute death-roll down Constitution Hill's 45 degree gradient. Swansea is the kind of place where (ideally) you'd like a hang-glider to get ...

Review of “On Tycho’s Island”…

Posted by nickpelling on Sep 19th, 2008 - 3 comments.
People don't generally know a lot about Tycho Brahe, which is a shame. In most accounts of the history of astronomy, his bright star tends to get eclipsed by the twin 17th century supernovae of Kepler and Galileo. But scratch the surface of the story, and it's really not that simple... Brahe was a Danish nobleman with a singleminded desire - to understand ...

A little more on Tadeáš Hájek z Hájku…

Posted by nickpelling on Aug 5th, 2008.
A nice little thing just arrived in the post: I had contacted the Prague-based Society for the History of Sciences ("DVT" = dějiny věd a techniky) to ask how to get hold of a copy of its 2000 monograph on Tadeáš Hájek z Hájku. To my surprise, the DVT's Igor Janovský said - don't worry about paying, we'll just send ...

Pietro Andrea Mattioli…

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 26th, 2008.
Google only finds about ten pages where Pietro Andrea Mattioli (1501-1577) is linked with the Voynich Manuscript. Here's a short research note to fill that gap... If you look at Mattioli's CV, you'll see plenty of echoes with other people linked to the VMs. Though a renowned herbal compiler & writer in his spare time, he was also a physician ...

Czech Voynich theory…

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 19th, 2008.
My fellow Voynich old-timer Jan Hurych has long been interested in various Prague-linked research strands: after all, Prague was home to the first three properly-documented owners of the Voynich Manuscript (Jacobus de Tepenecz, Georg Baresch, and Johannes Marcus Marci), as well as its most illustrious claimed owner (Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II). It is certainly true that Rudolf's interests and obsessions ...

Tadeáš Hájek z Hájku (& the Voynich Ms)…?

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 13th, 2008.
Here's a little piece of Voynichiana pinging on the edges of the VMs research radar, concerning Tadeáš Hájek z Hájku (1525-1600), who I thought had not to date been speculatively linked with the VMs. It came from the text accompanying the "Earth and Sky: Astronomy and Geography at the University between the 15th and the 18th centuries" exhibition at ...