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Claudii Ptolemaei opera quae exstant omnia

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Classics series
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Best known for his 1906 discovery of lost texts in the Archimedes Palimpsest, Danish scholar Johan Ludvig Heiberg (1854-1928), professor of classical philology at Copenhagen, published numerous editions of ancient mathematicians, including Archimedes and Apollonius of Perga (also reissued in this series).

Between 1898 and 1907, he published in three parts the extant astronomical works of Ptolemy, active in second-century Alexandria.

The Ptolemaic system, his geocentric model of the universe, prevailed in the Islamic world and in medieval Europe until the time of Copernicus.

Volume 1 appeared in two parts. Part 1 (1898) contains Books 1-6 of Ptolemy's major astronomical treatise, the Almagest.

Part 2 (1903) contains Books 7-13. Volume 2 (1907) contains a substantial prolegomena in Latin, followed by the Greek text of Ptolemy's shorter astronomical works, notably Hypotheseis ton planomenon, his planetary hypotheses, provided here with a facing-page translation into German.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108063632 / 9781108063630
Laminated
520
13/02/2014
United Kingdom
2 volumes (1670 pages).
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