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J.L. Heilbron, The Sun in the Chuch. Cathedrals as Solar Observatories. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999. To order this book from Amazon.com, click here. Reviewed by Paul A. Calter and Kim Williams
One main thesis of this book is Heilbron's dispute of the claim that the church was hostile to science. He points out that the church supported astronomy for the six centuries, from the late middle ages into the enlightenment, and that the meridian makers had careers largely underwritten by the church. The condemnation of Copernican theories by the church was largely ignored by clerics, and those willing to call a theory a hypothesis could publish any astronomy they wanted. The Jesuits were teaching heliocentrism before the end of the seventeenth century using the convenient fiction that it was a convenient fiction. Heilbron says that many clerics felt that math and astronomy had no fundamental connection to the rest of the body of knowledge, and therefore could have no effect on the truths of faith. Again, the main reason for these astronomical investigations, according to Heilbron, was to fix the date of Easter. Another main contribution of this book concerns meridian lines or meridiane, astronomical instruments hardly ever mentioned in books on astronomy. The calculation of the date of Easter depended on exact values of the periods between successive vernal equinoxes and between successive full moons. The key parameter for the calculation was the time for the sun to return to the same equinox. The best tool for determining this was the meridian line, a north-south line in a dark building with a hole in its roof. One observed how long it takes the sun to return to the same spot on the line. Much of this book is devoted to the history of the development of such meridiane. But what this book is not is a discussion of what influence astronomy had on sacred architecture, a subject so clearly but not exhaustively discussed by Robin Evans in The Projective Cast. Architecture and Its Three Geometries. Evans describes how the notion of the supposedly circular orbits of the planets was translated into the architecture of domes and circular-plan spaces during the Renaissance, giving way to the elliptical plans of the Baroque after the general acceptance of Kepler's discovery of elliptical orbits. In contrast, to Heilbron the architecture of the church is almost incidental; churches were long, and so the meridians fit. He explains that churches were the most convenient sites for the placement of meridians for observing the sun's movements, due to their shape and the protected environment they provides, as well as the fact that those most interested in observing the sun were the clergy, for whom "science [was] a by-product of advancing the core interests of the church" (p. 36). This book offers a different kind of travel guide for the "mathematical tourist", providing an itinerary of Italian cities and churches in which to find meridians, analemmas, armillary spheres and gnomons. These are good reminders of the role of the church in the history of science and testify to the fact that everything applied to the church, even the most apparently ornamental, served a didactic purpose. However, it is not easy reading. It contains a good history
of astronomy in general, and the development of the calendar
over the centuries, but many readers will get bogged down in
the mass of minute detail of historical developments, such as
that for each meridian line. The calculations in this book were
very difficult to follow, even for a mathematics textbook author.
Kim Williams is the Editor in Chief of the Nexus Network Journal and director of the Nexus conferences on architecture and mathematics. Paul Calter and Kim Williams presented a joint paper on the survey of a doorway by Michelangelo in the Laurentian Library in Florence at the Nexus 2000 conference on architecture and mathematics.
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