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Royal Observatory Greenwich
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Author:
Type: Hardback
ISBN: 9781906367916
Date: 16th October, 2025
Publisher: Royal Museums Greenwich
Description
When King Charles II signed the royal warrant that led to the
founding of the Royal Observatory in 1675, it was to ensure
that Britain was not left behind other European nations as they
pursued global trade and resources. Now, in its 350th year, the
'small observatory within our park at Greenwich' is perhaps
the most famous such institution in the world, home to the
historic Prime Meridian of the World, 0° longitude, and an
essential reference on our clocks, watches, maps and globes.
The 100 objects contained within the pages of this book
highlight the many people, ideas and technologies that
contributed to 'perfecting the art of navigation' and mapping
the stars. They include some of the most famous objects in the
Royal Observatory's collection, like John Harrison's pioneering
timekeepers, the Great Equatorial Telescope and the Shepherd
Motor Clock, along with lesser-known items that document
how our ideas about time and space have changed over the
centuries. Moreover, they represent the Observatory's varied
functions: as a data service for stellar, lunar and planetary
positions and timings; as a hub of global significance for
leading researchers, intellectuals and craftsmen; the site of
early astrophotography; and even as a private home for the
families of the Astronomers Royal.
Arranged in chronological order, instruments, photographs,
plans and archival documents tell the story of the Royal
Observatory from its early days as Britain's first state-funded
purpose-built scientific institution, through periods of rapid
scientific and social change, all the way to its twilight years at
the forefront of astronomical research in the first few decades
of the twentieth century. Today, the Observatory is once more
a working observing site but also a heritage centre and home
to London's only planetarium, seeking to inform and inspire
with stories of discovery, innovation and wonder.