astronomy header image


The Early History of Astronomy

The evolution of astronomy has indeed gone a very long way. Americans and Russians have made advancements in astronomy over the years and there are all sorts of astronomy clubs around the world. There are some especially unique pieces of equipment used today. However, the early history of astronomy is one of the most interesting parts of astronomy in that it shows how far the science has gone.

 

Astrology was directly linked with astronomy in the days before the Common Era began. Whereas astronomy is the study of space, including stars, planets and other things with an emphasis on science, astrology is the study of zodiac signs with the intention to measure how the growth and future of one person will be. These were both used together with no separations between one another.

The Babylonian civilization from before the Common Era is seen as the earliest of the groups that had used astronomy. However, there were some other countries where astronomy was becoming separate from astrology. Much of the Arabian Peninsula was interested in this study, and the evolution of astronomy came into its own in China and India as well. In fact, astronomy was well linked to religion in these areas, as the original story of Christmas states that the Magi had followed a star in the sky to find the savior of their people.

The first book involving astronomy was written by Ptolemy, a Greek scientist in the days of the Greek Empire. Since then many others have looked into this field, including Kepler, Copernicus, Galileo, Sir Isaac Newton, Benjamin Franklin and in more recent times Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking.

Various words used today are from the evolution of astronomy. For instance, influenza comes from a Latin word for influence in that it was believed that the positioning between the moon and stars could influence the health of a person or to help cure diseases. Disaster comes from a Latin word for “bad star,” and lunatic comes from the root word of “Luna,” which is the Latin word for moon. That was formed from a belief in Latin times that during a full moon a person could end up acting in irrational behavior.

Also, Sunday and Monday are considered to have been the start of a week because they are used in astronomy for time. The literal interpretations of these days in astronomy is that they are considered to be the days of the sun and moon.

The evolution of astronomy is an amazing thing, and the early history of astronomy is unique in that it has gone to where more people are following it to this day. As time goes along there will certainly be more discovering, but it is the discoveries of those from the past that have helped to make astronomy what it is today.


 

astronomy Recommended Products


astronomy News and Information


Interesting Facts About Astronomy News

Rare solar eclipse dazzles watchers

More than 150 people gathered at Piner High School in Santa Rosa to view Sunday's solar eclipse. 'It's awesome,' said one watcher.

Read more...


Alltopics.com Offers the Latest Topics on NASA

Alltopics.com is calling all scientists; the new branch of Science has been created on Alltopics.com. The NASA section offers the latest news. Readers can find the most complete and up to the second information on Nasa.alltopics.com. Alltopics.com is an all-in-one website for the top news articles about NASA.(PRWEB) May 13, 2012 Nasa.alltopics.com is the number one news and information source ...

Read more...


Unstoppable | Bad Astronomy

My willingness to fight has seen some major impediments in the past few weeks. The increase in antireality nonsense seems like a growing tsunami. Antivax health threats. Global warming denial on a major (and heavily funded) scale. The ugliness yesterday in North Carolina . And even though we’ve had some great victories, it’s still an endless road, always uphill, always against the wind. Despair ...

Read more...


The stories behind your sign of the zodiac

Horowhenua Astronomical Society Inc is pleased to announce a visit by the eminent astronomer Richard Hall . "Richard is one of New Zealand’s leading astronomers, and a renowned communicator with a gift for making the science and history of astronomy enjoyable and easy to understand" said Stephen Chadwick, President of the Horowhenua Astronomical Society , adding "we are definitely honoured to ...

Read more...


Backyard Astronomer: Saturn nears the Earth

By Neal Galt When Venus nears the Earth, we might be 26 million miles from our nearest neighbor. Mars is the next closest planet at about 54 million miles. But, when Saturn comes in close, it only gets within 746 million miles from Earth. Nevertheless, this is as good as it gets and that is right now! read more

Read more...




Home
Astronomy Games News
Top Links
Southern Constellations Links
Sitemap

Slifer the sky dragon
Two discoveries of galileo
Astronomy timeline
Modern astronomy
Jobs in astronomy
Astronomy for kids pluto
Basic astronomy terms
Ancient astronomy
Cartoon stars
Astronomy for beginners
Astronomy parsec
Colorful stars
Star facts
Astronomy research
Bright star



Warning: file_get_contents(http://ecs.amazonaws.com/onca/xml?Service=AWSECommerceService&Version=2005-03-23&Operation=ItemSearch&ContentType=text%2Fxml&SubscriptionId=122CAXMJKCG3B7DHGZG2&AssociateTag=buicgrannati-20&SearchIndex=Books&BrowseNode=&Keywords=astronomy&ItemPage=1&Sort=&ResponseGroup=Images,ItemAttributes,OfferFull,Medium,VariationSummary) [function.file-get-contents]: failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request in /home/lookwebs/public_html/iwantinfoabout/astronomy/includes/amazon.php on line 846


Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in /home/lookwebs/public_html/iwantinfoabout/astronomy/includes/amazon.php on line 868