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ROBERT See also: British astronomer, was See also: born`
at See also: Grantown, Scotland, on the 17th of See also: June 1814
.
At the age of thirteen the promise of a brilliant career was clouded by a prolonged illness of such a serious character as to incapacitate him from all school-See also: work for six years
.
At twenty, however, his See also: health greatly improved, and he set himself resolutely, without assistance, to repair his earlier disadvantages by the diligent study of See also: Greek, Latin, See also: Italian and See also: mathematics
.
Astronomy
also occupied his See also: attention, and it was stimulated by the return of See also: Halley's See also: comet in 1835, as well as by his success in observing the See also: annular eclipse of the See also: sun of the 15th of May 1836
.
After a See also: short course at See also: King's
See also: College, See also: Aberdeen, he obtained in 1841 employment in his See also: brother's counting-See also: house in See also: London
.
During this See also: period the idea occurred to him of writing a See also: history of See also: physical astronomy
.
Before definitely beginning the work he had to See also: search, amongst other records, those of the French See also: Academy, and for that purpose took up his residence in See also: Paris in 1845, supporting himself by giving lessons in See also: English
.
He returned to London in 1847
.
The History of Physical Astronomy from the Earliest Ages to the See also: Middle of the Nineteenth Century was first published in parts in The Library of Useful Knowledge, but after the issue of the ninth See also: part this mode of publication was discontinued, and the work appeared as a whole in 1852
.
The See also: main See also: object of the work is, in the author's words, " to exhibit a view of the labours of successive inquirers in establishing a knowledge of the See also: mechanical principles which regulate the movements of the See also: celestial bodies, and in explaining the various phenomena relative to their physical constitution which observation with the See also: telescope has disclosed." The lucidity and completeness with which a See also: great variety of abstruse subjects were treated, the extent of research and the maturity of See also: judgment it displayed, were the more remarkable, when it is remembered that this was the first published work of one who enjoyed no See also: special opportunities, either for acquiring materials, or for discussing with others engaged in similar pursuits the subjects it treats of
.
The See also: book at once took a leading place in astronomical literature, and earned for its author in 1856 the award of the Royal Astronomical Society's gold medal
.
In 1859 he succeeded See also: John
See also: Pringle See also: Nichol as professor of astronomy in the University of See also: Glasgow
.
From See also: time to time he contributed astronomical papers to the Monthly Notices, Astronomische Nachrichten, Comptes rendus and other scientific serials; but his See also: principal work at Glasgow consisted in determining the places of a large number of stars with the Ertel transit-circle of the See also: Observatory
.
The results of these labours, extending over twenty-one years, are contained in the Glasgow See also: Catalogue of 6415 Stars, published in 1883
.
This was followed in 1892 by the Second Glasgow Catalogue of 2156 Stars, published a few See also: weeks after his See also: death, which took place on the 24th of See also: October 1892
.
See See also: Month
.
Notices See also: Roy
.
Astr
.
Society, liii., 210 (E
.
Dunkin); Nature, Nov
.
10, 1892; The Times, Nov
.
2, 1892; Roy
.
Society's Catalogue of Scient
.
Papers
.
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