Rev. John Flamsteed
First Astronomer Royal
Born: 1646 Denby, Derbyshire, England
Died: 1719
Buried: St Bartholomew's Church, Burstow, Surrey, England
Astronomer Royal: 1675 - 1719
Flamsteed was ordained in 1671 but became interested in Astronomy when he was
forced to postpone university due to ill health. He went on to get a degree at
Jesus College Cambridge. Before his appointment at Greenwich his work in
astronomy had included the observation of a solar eclipse in 1662 and
determining solar parallax from observations of Mars.
The Governmental Office of Ordinance provided money for the building and for
salaries. The equipment came from donation and bought by Flamsteed
himself. Flamsteed laboriously compiled detailed observations of star
positions. His most famous achievement at the Observatory was to produce a 3000
star British Catalogue. In addition to this work he made observations of
the made tables of the Sun's motion, measured the latitude of Greenwich,
calculated the inclination of the ecliptic and the position of the equinoxes,
created tables of atmospheric refraction, and tidal patterns, and devised a
method of observing absolute Right Ascension.
Later in life Flamsteed argued with both Newton
and Halley. Relations became worse in 1712 when Halley
published a private edition of Flamsteed's observations without his permission.
Of the 400 copies of Historia Coelestis, published Flamsteed recovered 300 and
burn them after removing the 97 pages he considered to have been untampered
with. His observations were finally published as Flamsteed had intended in 1725
after his death.
Established the first Meridian Line in Greenwich
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