John Flamsteed FRS (19 August 1646 – 31
December 1719) was an English
astronomer and the first Astronomer Royal.
Life
Flamsteed
was born in Denby
, Derbyshire
, England
, and was
educated at Derby
School
, in St Peter's Churchyard, Derby
, near where
his father carried on a malting
business. At that time, most masters of the school were
Puritans. Flamsteed had a solid knowledge of
Latin, essential for reading the
literature of the day, and a love of
history, leaving the school in May, 1662.
His
progress to University of Cambridge
, recommended by the Master of Derby School, was
delayed by some years of chronic ill health. During those
years, Flamsteed gave his father some help in his business, and
from his father learnt
arithmetic and the
use of
fractions, but he used
those years also to develop a keen interest in
mathematics and
astronomy. In July 1662, he was fascinated by the
thirteenth century work of
Johannes de Sacrobosco,
De sphaera mundi, and on 12 September
1662 observed his first partial
solar
eclipse. Early in 1663, he read
Thomas
Fale's
The Art of Dialling, which set off an interest
in
sundials. In the summer of 1663, he read
Wingate's
Canon,
William
Oughtred's
Canon, and Thomas Stirrup's
Art of
Dialling. At about the same time, he acquired
Thomas Street's
Astronomia Carolina, or A
New Theory of the Celestial Motions (
Caroline
Tables). He associated himself with local gentlemen interested
in astronomy, including
William
Litchford, whose library included the work of the
astrologer John
Gadbury which included astronomical tables by
Jeremiah Horrocks, who had died in 1641 at
the age of twenty-three. Flamsteed was greatly impressed (as
Isaac Newton had been) by the work of
Horrocks.
In August 1665, at the age of nineteen and as a gift for his friend
Litchford, Flamsteed wrote his first paper on astronomy, entitled
Mathematical Essays, concerning the design, use and
construction of an astronomer's
quadrant, including tables for the
latitude of Derby.
In
September 1670, Flamsteed visited Cambridge and entered his name as
an undergraduate at Jesus College
. While it seems he never took up full
residence, he was there for two months in 1674, and had the
opportunity to hear Isaac Newton's
Lucasian
Lectures.
He was ordained a deacon and was preparing to take up a living in
Derbyshire, when he was invited to London. On 4 March 1675 he was
appointed by royal warrant "The King's Astronomical Observator" —
the first British
Astronomer Royal,
with an allowance of £100 a year.
In June 1675, another royal warrant
provided for the founding of the Royal Greenwich
Observatory
, and Flamsteed laid the foundation stone in
August. In February 1676, he was admitted a Fellow of
the Royal Society, and in July, he
moved into the Observatory where he lived until 1684, when he was
finally appointed priest to the parish of Burstow
, Surrey
. He
held that office, as well as that of Astronomer Royal, until his
death. He is buried at Burstow.
Scientific work

Bust of John Flamsteed in the Museum
of the Royal Greenwich Observatory
Flamsteed accurately calculated the
solar
eclipses of 1666 and 1668. He was responsible for several of
the earliest recorded sightings of the
planet
Uranus, which he mistook for a
star and catalogued as
34
Tauri. The first of these was in December, 1690, which remains
the earliest known sighting of Uranus by an astronomer.
On 16 August 1680 Flamsteed catalogued a star, 3
Cassiopeiae, that later
astronomers were unable to corroborate. Three hundred years later,
the American astronomical historian
William Ashworth suggested that what
Flamsteed may have seen was the most recent supernova in the
galaxy's history, an event which would leave as its remnant the
strongest radio source outside of the solar system, known in the
third
Cambridge catalogue as 3C 461 and commonly called
Cassiopeia A by astronomers. Because the
position of "3 Cassiopeiae" does not precisely match that of
Cassiopeia A, and because the expansion wave associated with the
explosion has been worked backward to the year 1667 and not 1680,
some historians feel that all Flamsteed may have done was
incorrectly note the position of a star already known.
Flamsteed is also remembered for his conflicts with
Isaac Newton, the President of the
Royal Society at the time. Flamsteed was
refusing to publish work that had been commissioned by the king,
and in 1712 Newton and
Edmond Halley
published a preliminary version of Flamsteed's
Historia
Coelestis Britannica without crediting the author. Some years
later, Flamsteed managed to buy many copies of the book, and
publicly burnt them in front of the Royal Observatory. However, the
numerical star designations in this book are still used and are
known as
Flamsteed
designations.
In 1725 Flamsteed's own version of
Historia Coelestis
Britannica was published posthumously, edited by his wife
Margaret. This contained Flamsteed's observations, and included a
catalogue of 2,935 stars to much greater accuracy than any prior
work. This was considered the first significant contribution of the
Greenwich Observatory. In 1729 his wife published his
Atlas
Coelestis, assisted by
Joseph
Crosthwait and
Abraham Sharp, who
were responsible for the technical side.
Honours
See also
Notes
- Birks, John L., John Flamsteed, the first Astronomer
Royal (London, Avon Books, 1999) pp. 3-4.
- Birks, op. cit., pp. 8-11
- Birks, op. cit., p. 11
- Birks, op. cit., p. 26
Further reading
- The correspondence of John Flamsteed, the first Astronomer
Royal compiled and edited by Eric G. Forbes, ... Lesley Murdin
and Frances Willmoth. Bristol: Institute of Physics Publishing,
1995-2002 ISBN 0750301473 (v. 1); ISBN 0-7503-0391-3 (v. 2) ; ISBN
0-7503-0763-3 (v.3)
- The Gresham lectures of John Flamsteed, edited and
introduced by Eric G. Forbes. London: Mansell, 1975 ISBN
0-7201-0518-8
- Newton's Tyranny: The Suppressed Scientific Discoveries of
Stephen Gray and John Flamsteed, David H. Clark & Stephen
H.P. Clark. W. H. Freeman, 2001 ISBN 0-7167-4701-4
External links