References
Abū’l Faḍl ʻAllāmī (16th c./1927). Ā’īn-i Akbarī (Institutes of Akbar), translated into English by H. Blochmann, Bibliotheka Indica, No. 6. Reprint, Calcutta. I refer it as Abū’l Faḍl/Blochmann.
Abū’l Faḍl ʻAllāmī (16th c./1972). The Akbar Nāmah, translated into English by H. Beveridge, in 3 vols. Reprinted at Delhi. Persian text originally published in Calcutta, 1877.
al-Bīrūnī, Abū Rayḥān Muḥamamd (1029). Kitāb al-Tafhīm li Awā’il Ṣināʻa al-Tanjīm. (The book of instruction in the elements of the art of astronomy), translated from Arabic into English by R. Ramsay Wright. London: Luzac & Co. 1934. (Reprinted and published by Fuat Sezgin, in Islamic Mathematics and Astronomy Series. Vol. 29. Institute for the History of Arabic-Islamic Science, Frankfurt am Main, 1998).
Ansari, S. M. R. (1985a). The observatories movement in India during the 17th-18th centuries. Vistas in Astronomy, 28, 379–385. First diagrammatic proof of Jai Singh’s use of the telescope.
Ansari, S. M. R. (1985b). Introduction of modern astronomy in India during 18th-19th centuries. Indian Journal of History of Science, 20, 363–402, esp. 364–369.
Ansari, S. M. R. (1995a). On the transmission of Arabic-Islamic astronomy to medieval India. Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences, 45(135), 273–297.
Ansari, S. M. R. (1995/1996). Ghulām Ḥusain Jaunpurī and His Zīj-i Bahādurkhānī. Studies in History of Medicine and Science, 14(1–2), 181–188, New Series (New Delhi).
Ansari, S. M. R. (2002), “European astronomy in Indo–Persian writings”, in History of Oriental Astronomy, edited by S. M. R. Ansari. Dordrecht, Kluwer Academic Publisher, pp. 133–144.
Ansari, S.M. R. (2007/2014). On Raja Sawai Jai Singh. In T. Hockey (Editor-in-chief), The biographical encyclopaedia of astronomers (Vol. I, pp. 585–586). New York, NY: Springer. The revised and updated version for publication in the second edition of BEA is in press, expected in 2014.
Ansari, S. M. R. (2008). Promotion of exact sciences during the 14th-15th centuries. In M. Bilquis (Ed.), Persian literature produced during the sultanate period (pp. 60–72). Aligarh, UP: Department of Persian, Aligarh Muslim University.
Ansari, S. M. R. (2011). A survey of Arabic-Persian sources on the astrolabe extant in India and on the Indian astrolabe-makers. In T. Nakamura, W. Orchiston, M. Sôma, R. Strom (Eds.), Mapping the oriental sky. Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Oriental Astronomy, held on 6–10 Sept 2010 (pp. 99–108). Tokyo: National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.
Ansari, S. M. R. (2013). The compilation of Zijes in India (in Persian). In M. R. Nasiri (Ed.), Encyclopaedia of Persian language and literature in the subcontinent (Vol. III, pp. 533–536). Tehran: The Academy of Persian Language and Literature. An updated version in English will be published in the Indian Journal of History of Science, Jubilee Volume (2015).
de Young, G. (2004). John Greaves’ Astronomica quaedam: Orientalism and ptolemaic cosmography in seventeenth century England. Indian Journal of History of Science, 39(4), 467–510.
Farishtah, Muḥammad Qāsim Hindū Shāh (1966, 1971). Tārīkh-i Farishtah (in Persian), Nawal Kishore Publisher, Lucknow AH1281/AD1864. English translation by John Briggs, The history of the rise of the Mahomedan power in India. Indian Edition, Calcutta. Vol. I–III (1966), Vol. IV (1971). Reprint of the first edition (London, 1829). I refer it as Farishtah/Briggs.
Fikrat, Muḥammad Āṣaf (1991). Alphabetical catalogue of manuscripts of the Central Library of Āstān-i Quds Raḍawī. Mashhad, Publication Division of the Library of Holy Shrine, No. 12, p. 299.
Ghori, S. A. K. (1985). Development of Zīj-Literature in India. Indian Journal of History of Science, 20, 21–48.
Ghori, S. A. Khan (1969). Perspective of the revival of rationalism (ʻaqliyāt) in India, in Urdu, Majalla’-i ʻUlūm-i Islāmiya, Aligarh, June-December, pp. 1–63.
Gillispie, C.C. (1969–1990). Dictionary of scientific biographies. New York, NY: Charles Scribner, a multivolume work with two supplementary volumes, abbreviated in the text by Gillispie, DSB.
Ḥusaynī, Aḥmad, & Marʻashī, Maḥmūd (1994). Catalogue of the Āyat Allāh al-ʻUẓmā Najafī Marʻashī Public Library. Qum, Iran, 23, p. 293.
Kennedy, E. S. (1956). A survey of Islamic astronomical tables. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series, 46, 123–177.
King, D. A. (1993). Astronomy in the service of Islam (Collected studies series, CS416). Hampshire: Variorum. 333 pages.
King, D., & Samso, J. (2001). Astronomical handbooks and tables from the Islamic World (750–1900): An interim report (with a contribution by B.R. Goldstein). Suhayl (Barcelona), 2, 9–105.
Mercier, R. (1984). The astronomical tables of Rajah Jai Singh Sawā’i. Indian Journal of History of Science, 19, 143–171.
Monzavi, A. (1983). A comprehensive catalogue of Persian manuscripts in Pakistan (Vol. I). Islamabad: Iran Pakistan Institute of Persian Studies.
Moreas, G. M. (1951–1952). Astronomical missions to the court of Jaipur, 1730–1743. Journal of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 27, 61–65, 85.
Muḥammad Amīn Masʻūdī (1815). Zīj-i Saʻīdī. Ms. WMS Persian No. 254, scribed in 1841. London: The Wellcome Library of the Wellcome Institute of the History of Medicine. I thank Benno van Dalen for presenting me a copy.
Ohashi, Y. (1997). Early history of astrolabe in India. Indian Journal of History of Science, 32(3), 199–295.
Orthmann, E. (2005). Circular motions: Private pleasure and public prognostication in the nativities of the Mughal Emperor Akbar. In O. Günther, H. D. Rutkin, & K. von Stuckrad (Eds.), Horoscopes and public spheres: Essays on the history of astrology (pp. 101–114). Berlin/New York, NY: Walter de Gruyter.
Pingree, D. (2002). Philippe de La Hire at the court of Jayasimha. In S. M. R. Ansari (Ed.), History of oriental astronomy (pp. 123–131). Dordrecht: Kluwer.
Riazul Islam, I. (1970). Indo-Persian relations: A study of the political and diplomatic relations between the Mughul Empire and Iran. Tehran: Iran Cultural Foundation, printed at Lahore.
Saliba, G. (1994). A history of Arabic astronomy (Planetary theories during the Golden Age of Islam). New York, NY: New York University Press.
Sarma, S. R. (1994). The Lahore family of Astrolabists and their ouvrage. Studies in History of Medicine and Science, XIII(2), 205–224, New Series (New Delhi).
Sarma, S. R. (1998). Translation of scientific texts into Sanskrit under Swai Jai Singh. Sri Venkateswara University Oriental Journal, XLI(1–2), 68–87.
Sarma, S. R. (1999). Yantrarāja: The astrolabe in Sanskrit. Indian Journal of History of Science, 34(2), 145–158.
Sarma, S. R. (2000). Sultan, Sūrī and the astrolabe. Indian Journal of History of Science, 35(2), 129–147.
Sayili, A. (1960). The Observatory in Islam. Publications of the Turkish historical society, series VII, no. 38. Ankara: Turk Tarih Kurumu Basimevi (The Turkish Historical Society), 473 pp.
Storey C. A. (1972). Persian Literature. A Bio-bibliographical Survey Vol. II Part 1. London Luzac & Co. reprinted. First printed in 1958.
Ṭāhir Khān alias ʻInāyat Khān, Mīrzā Muḥammad (17th c.) (2009). Mulakhkhaṣ-i Shāhjahān Nāmah. An abridgment partly of Pāḍshāh Nāmāh by ʻAbdul Ḥamīd Lāhorī (d. 1655). Critically edited by Jameelur Rehman (Delhi University), with an introduction and annotations. New Delhi: Centre for Persian Research, Iran Cultural House.
van Dalen, B. (2000). Origin of the mean motion tables of Jai Singh. Indian Journal of History of Science, 35, 41–66.
van Dalen, B. (2004). The Zīj-i Nāṣirī by Maḥmūd ibn ʻUmar. The earliest Indian-Islamic astronomical handbook with tables and its relation to the ‘Alā’ī Zīj. In C. Burnett et al. (Eds.), Studies in the history of the exact sciences in honour of David Pingree (pp. 825–862). Leiden: Brill.
van Dalen, B. (2007a). A new survey of Islamic astronomical handbooks, with description of more than 200 Arabic and Persian Zījes. Preliminary Draft. To be published in the Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, PA.
van Dalen, B. (2007b). Ulugh Beg: Muḥammad Ṭaraghāy ibn Shāhrukh ibn Tīmūr. In T. Hockey (Ed.), The biographical encyclopedia of astronomers (Vol. II, pp. 1157–1159). New York, NY: Springer.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2015 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht
About this entry
Cite this entry
Ansari, S.M.R. (2015). Astronomy in Medieval India. In: Selin, H. (eds) Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-3934-5_10114-2
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-3934-5_10114-2
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Online ISBN: 978-94-007-3934-5
eBook Packages: Springer Reference Religion and PhilosophyReference Module Humanities and Social SciencesReference Module Humanities
Publish with us
Chapter history
-
Latest
Astronomy in Medieval India- Published:
- 24 February 2015
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-3934-5_10114-2
-
Original
Astronomy in Medieval India- Published:
- 09 September 2014
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-3934-5_10114-1