Article ID: CBB001420004

The Scholar as Craftsman: Derek De Solla Price and the Reconstruction of a Medieval Instrument (2014)

unapi

The Royal Society Conversaziones were biannual social evenings at which distinguished guests could learn about the latest scientific developments. The Conversazione in May 1952 featured an object that came to be called King Arthur's Table. It was a planetary equatorium, made in Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory at the behest of Sir Lawrence Bragg. Conceived by the historian of science Derek de Solla Price as a huge, tangible realization of Chaucerian astronomy, it was displayed at the new Whipple Museum of the History of Science, discarded, stored incognito, catalogued with that whimsical name, and finally re-identified in 2012. This article examines the biography of that object and, through it, the early, inchoate years of the discipline of history of science in Cambridge. The process of disciplinary establishment involved a range of actors beyond well-known figures such as Herbert Butterfield and Joseph Needham; the roles of Price and Bragg are highlighted here. Study of these individuals, and of the collaboration that brought about the reconstruction, reveals much about the establishment of a discipline, as well as changing scholarly and curatorial attitudes towards replicas.

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Authors & Contributors
Ezio Zanini
Eagleton, Catherine
Davis, John
Burnett, Charles
Gabrovsky, Alexander N.
Flora Vafea
Journals
Journal for the History of Astronomy
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Nuncius: Annali di Storia della Scienza
Medieval Encounters
Journal of Skyscape Archaeology
Mediaevalia: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Medieval Studies Worldwide
Publishers
Bookstones
University of Oklahoma Press
Palgrave Macmillan
CNRS Éd
Brepols
Concepts
Astronomy
Instruments, astronomical
Astrolabes
Historical reconstruction
Scientific apparatus and instruments
Wood
People
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Whethamstede, John
Marseille, Raymond de
Dorn, Hans Johannes
Time Periods
Medieval
Renaissance
Modern
Ancient
20th century
19th century
Places
British Isles
Nuremberg (Germany)
England
Italy
Germany
Europe
Institutions
Jagiellonian University Museum
British Museum
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