StorageSiteUCL Special Collections
LevelItem
Reference Number MS GRAVES/15
TitleSeth Ward, "Geometricall Astronomy" (English Translation)
Date1667
DescriptionManuscript volume, 1667, containing Seth Ward's 'Geometricall Astronomy' translated from the Latin, perhaps by William Peters, with ink diagrams accompanying the text.
Extent1 volume containing 100 leaves
AdminHistorySeth Ward: born, 1617; educated at Buntingford school; admitted to Sidney Sussex College Cambridge, 1632; scholar; devoted much attention to studying mathematics; graduated BA, 1637; MA, 1640; Fellow of Sidney Sussex, 1640; mathematical lecturer, 1643; following the outbreak of civil war, deprived of his fellowship for refusing the covenant, 1644; took refuge with friends; improved his knowledge of mathematics; appointed Savilian professor of astronomy at Oxford, 1649; took the oath to the Commonwealth; attempted to revive interest in the astronomical lectures, which had fallen into neglect; also gained fame as a preacher; incorporated MA at Oxford, 1649; a member of the Philosophical Society of Oxford (one of the forerunners of the Royal Society), c1649; entered as a fellow-commoner Wadham College, 1650; chiefly remembered as an astronomer by his theory of planetary motion, publishing a treatise on the subject, 1653; issued a more elaborate form of his thesis, 1656; DD, Oxford, 1654; became involved in a mathematical and philosophical controversy with Hobbes; appointed precentor at Exeter, 1656; DD, Cambridge, 1659; chosen president of Trinity College Oxford, 1659; possessing none of the statutory qualifications for the office, he was compelled to resign, 1660; made a prebendary at Exeter, 1660; resigned his professorship, retired to London, and was compensated by Charles II with the vicarage of St Lawrence Jewry, to which he was admitted, 1661; elected dean at Exeter, 1661; rector of Uplowman, Devonshire; rector of St Breock, Cornwall, 1662; consecrated bishop of Exeter, 1662; translated to the see of Salisbury, 1667; chancellor of the order of the Garter, 1671; declined the bishopric of Durham, 1672; died at Knightsbridge, 1689; buried in Salisbury Cathedral. Publications include: 'Astronomia geometrica' (London, 1656).
CustodialHistoryThe manuscript formed part of the library of John Thomas Graves (1806-1870), mathematician and Professor of Jurisprudence at University College London, whose collection included manuscripts dating from the 15th to the 19th century, relating mainly to mathematics. Formerly Graves 1925. Other pressmarks: 121.c.24; 50.h.3.
AcquisitionGraves' library was bequeathed to University College London in 1870.
AccessStatusOpen
AccessConditionsThe papers are available subject to the usual conditions of access to Archives and Manuscripts material, after the completion of a Reader's Undertaking.
FindingAidsDorothy K Coveney, 'A Descriptive Catalogue of Manuscripts in the Library of University College London' (London, 1935); handlist at University College London Special Collections.
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