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  2. Yantraraja - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yantraraja

    An astrolabe from the Mughal era exhibited at the National Museum in New Delhi, India. Yantrarāja is the Sanskrit name for the ancient astronomical instrument called astrolabe . It is also the title of a Sanskrit treatise on the construction and working of the astrolabe composed by a Jain astronomer Mahendra Sūri in around 1370 CE.

  3. Astrolabe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astrolabe

    The first known metal astrolabe in Western Europe is the Destombes astrolabe made from brass in the eleventh century in Portugal. [ 27 ] [ 28 ] (p 140) Metal astrolabes avoided the warping that large wooden ones were prone to, allowing the construction of larger and therefore more accurate instruments.

  4. Verona astrolabe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verona_Astrolabe

    The Verona astrolabe is an archaeological discovery unearthed in the vaults of a museum in Verona, Italy. [1] Dating back to the eleventh century, this Islamic astrolabe is one of the oldest examples of its kind and is among the few known to exist worldwide. It appears to have been employed by Muslim, Jewish, and Christian communities spanning ...

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  6. Armillary sphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armillary_sphere

    Jost Bürgi and Antonius Eisenhoit: Armillary sphere with astronomical clock, made in 1585 in Kassel, now at Nordiska Museet in Stockholm. An armillary sphere (variations are known as spherical astrolabe, armilla, or armil) is a model of objects in the sky (on the celestial sphere), consisting of a spherical framework of rings, centered on Earth or the Sun, that represent lines of celestial ...

  7. Mariner's astrolabe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariner's_astrolabe

    The mariner's astrolabe, also called sea astrolabe, was an inclinometer used to determine the latitude of a ship at sea by measuring the sun's noon altitude (declination) or the meridian altitude of a star of known declination. Not an astrolabe proper, the mariner's astrolabe was rather a graduated circle with an alidade used to measure ...

  8. Canterbury Astrolabe Quadrant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canterbury_Astrolabe_Quadrant

    The Canterbury Astrolabe Quadrant is a medieval astrolabe believed to date from 1388, and which was found in an archaeological dig at the House of Agnes, [1] a bed and breakfast hotel in Canterbury, Kent, England, in 2005. The Canterbury Astrolabe Quadrant is the only one of its kind known to have been definitely made in England. [2]

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