This is a biography of 'England's greatest medieval scientist, a man who solved major practical and theoretical problems to build an extraordinary and pioneering astronomical and astrological clock'. John North tells an extraordinary story here; Richard of Wallingford (1292-1336) was the son of a blacksmith who became Abbot of St Albans, where he invented his clock, before finally succumbing to leprosy. The story of the invention of the clock and its science, is accompanied by a fascinating discussion of early 14th-century scientific endeavour, which examines the Oxford that Richard knew from his studies there, and how science and theology merged in the minds of medieval intellectuals. John North examines Richard's career at the great abbey of St Albans as well as its people and, in particular, its mills. Half of the study, however, focuses on the clock and its principles. North looks at the history of horologia , the sources, and Richard's own manual which North identified in the Bodleian Library in the 1960s.Finally, North discusses the history of astronomy and natural philosophy, the instruments used and the enormous legacy that Richard left even though so few have heard his name today. This is an excellent book, with fine illustrations throughout.
John North is Emeritus Professor of the History of Philosophy and the Exact Sciences, University of Groningen, and Fellow of the British Academy. He is the author of numerous books including The Ambassadors' Secret: Holbein and the World of the Renaissance and Stonehenge.
Eclipse; The Black Monks; Wallingford; Oxford; An Astronomer among Theologians; Crisis; The New Abbot; Reprove, Persuade, Rebuke; The Visitor Visited; Litigation; Builders and Clockmakers; Time and History; The St Albans Clock; Machina Mundi; Legacy; The Migration of Ideas; Aristotle; Natural Philosophy; Astronomers; Astrologers.
"If this book can work a comparable magic on others, inspiring more of us to take up investigation of the same historiographical path, our understanding of the Middle Ages, modernity, and the history of science will be the better for it." Steven P Marrone, Speculuma Journal of Medieval Studies 1 September 2009
Esther Eidinow, Armin W. Geertz, John North, Esther (University of Bristol) Eidinow, Denmark) Geertz, Armin W. (Aarhus Universitet, John (University College London) North, Armin W Geertz