Web Spotlight Build Status: . Updated at Invalid Date.
Copy link
Clear production site cache and rebuild
Clear Web Spotlight site cache and rebuild
Reindex Algolia
Jamieson, Alexander. A celestial atlas: comprising a systemic display of the heavens in a series of thirty maps. London, 1822, pl. 25.

Further Out: Recent Acquisitions of Celestial Atlases

An Exhibition of Rare Books from the Collection of the Linda Hall Library And a Supplement to Out of This World

Riedig, C. G. Himmels-Atlas in 20 Blättern nach den grossen Bodenschen Sternkarten. Leipzig, [1849].

The Riedig star atlas is the third of our recent acquisitions to be patterned after Bode’s Uranographia of 1801, and it is by far the smallest of the three (the other two are the atlases by Meissner and Green, exhibit items 7 and 11). Each Bode plate has been reduced by a factor of 48 to produce these tiny illustrations. The glory of the Riedig atlas is the delicate blue outline shading, which makes the constellations almost rise up off the page.

Cetus and the river Eridanus. Image source: Riedig, C. G. Himmels-Atlas in 20 Blättern nach den grossen Bodenschen Sternkarten. Leipzig: Schreibers Erben, 1849, pl. 17.

View Source »

The illustration above displays Cetus and the river Eridanus, as well as several more recent constellations at the bottom. Fornax and Sculptor were invented by Lacaille and are still used; Machina electrica, invented by Bode in celebration of the great static electrical generators of the eighteenth century, has been discarded.

The northern polar constellations (below) include Ursa Minor, Draco, Camelopardalis, and Cepheus. The small reindeer and the shepherd (Tarandus and Messium) were late eighteenth-century inventions and are now obsolete.

Ursa Minor, Draco, Camelopardalis, and Cepheus. Image source: Riedig, C. G. Himmels-Atlas in 20 Blättern nach den grossen Bodenschen Sternkarten. Leipzig: Schreibers Erben, 1849, pl. 3.

View Source »

The two illustrations below allow us to compare a Bode original and a Riedig copy. The Riedig plate of Leo and Cancer is close to natural size (left), but the Bode plate (right) has been greatly reduced.

Leo and Cancer. Image source: Riedig, C. G. Himmels-Atlas in 20 Blättern nach den grossen Bodenschen Sternkarten. Leipzig: Schreibers Erben, 1849, pl. 13.

View Source »

Leo and Cancer. Image source: Bode, Johann Elert. Uranographia. Berlin: apud Autorim, 1801, pl. 13.

View Source »