Article ID: CBB001320131

“Stargazers at the World's End”: Telescopes, Observatories and “Views” of Empire in the Nineteenth-Century British Empire (2013)

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This article argues that the study of astronomical observing instruments, their transportation around the globe and the personal and professional networks created by such exchanges are useful conceptual tools in exploring the role of science in the nineteenth-century British Empire. The shipping of scientific instruments highlights the physical and material connections that bound the empire together. Large, heavy and fragile objects, such as transit circles, were difficult to transport and repair. As such, the logistical difficulties associated with their movement illustrate the limitations of colonial scientific enterprises and their reliance on European centres. The discussion also examines the impact of the circulation of such objects on observatories and astronomers working in southern Africa, India and St Helena by tracing the connections between these places and British scientific institutions, London-based instrument-makers, and staff at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. It explores the ways in which astronomy generally, and the use of observing instruments in particular, relate to broader themes about the applications of science, the development of colonial identities, and the consolidation of empire in the first half of the nineteenth century. In considering these issues, the article illustrates the symbiotic relationship between science and empire in the period, demonstrating the overlap between political and strategic considerations and purely scientific endeavours. Almost paradoxically, as they trained their sights and their telescopes on the heavens, astronomers and observers helped to draw diverse regions of the earth beneath closer together. By tracing the movement of instruments and the arcs of patronage, cooperation and power that these trajectories inscribe, the role of science and scientific objects in forging global links and influencing the dynamics of the nineteenth-century British Empire is brought into greater focus.

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Description On the astronomical observing instruments, their transportation around the globe and the personal and professional networks created by such exchanges.


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Authors & Contributors
Orchiston, Wayne
Kapoor, R. C.
Mullen, Kane
Zuidervaart, Huibert Jan
Véron, Philippe
Tenn, Joseph S.
Journals
Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage
Rittenhouse: Journal of the American Scientific Instrument Enterprise
Revue d'Histoire des Sciences
Journal for the History of Astronomy
History of Science
British Journal for the History of Science
Publishers
Verlag Harri Deutsch
Museum of Victoria
Museum Boerhaave
Harvard University Press
CNRS
Ashgate
Concepts
Astronomy
Telescopes
Astronomical observatories
Scientific apparatus and instruments
Great Britain, colonies
Instruments, astronomical
People
Herschel, William
Herschel, Caroline
Fraunhofer, Joseph von
Wilson, Albert George
Janssen, Jules
Humboldt, Alexander von
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
18th century
20th century, late
17th century
Places
Great Britain
Netherlands
France
India
Bath (England)
Melbourne (Victoria, Australia)
Institutions
East India Company (English)
Leiden Observatory
Observatoire de Paris
Royal Observatory Greenwich
Pulkovo Observatory
Lowell Observatory
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