Author | Verbiest, Ferdinand 南懷仁, 1623-1688Golvers, NoëlFerdinand Verbiest InstituteNikolaidēs, E. (Efthymios)Kentro Neoellēnikōn Ereunōn. Κέντρο Νεοελληνικών Ερευνών (Ethnikon Hidryma Ereunōn) |
Place | Leuven |
Publisher | Ferdinand Verbiest Institute, K.U. Leuven |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | English, Latin |
Type | Book, Digital Book (PDF) |
Series | Leuven Chinese studies ; 19, Sources of modern Greek literature and learning ; 108 |
Shelf | Hallway Cases, Digital Archives |
Call Number | QB36.V46 G65 2009 |
Description | 382 p. : ill. ; 25 cm. + pdf |
Note | Ferdinand Verbiest and Jesuit science in 17th century China : an annotated edition and translation of the Constantinople manuscript (1676) / Noël Golvers and Efthymios Nicolaidis. "This book contains two manuscript texts of Ferdinand Verbiest, S.J. (1623-1688), written in 1676 in Beijing to the attention of the Russian tsar, and brought by the legate Nicolas Spathary Milescu to Moscow. Both texts represent the oldest layer of the Astronomia Europaea corpus, and were until recently forgotten. Their recent discovery was in the form of a manuscript copy, which Chysanthos Notaras had made them in Moscow in 1693. The manuscripts have since then been kept in library of the Metochion of the patriarchate of Jerusalem in Constantinople. In this publication, the authors are reconstituting the Latin text, translating it in English and annotating it. In the Introduction, the manuscripts are situated within the corpus of Verbiest's Latin writings, and are depicted both the parts that were afterwards re-cycled in the well-known Compendium Latinum and Astronomia Europaea edition (Dilingen, 1687), and those that were eventually omitted. Moreover, the story of the Moscow manuscript, and especially that of its Constantinopolitan copy - until now the only remaining testimonium of it - is traced. This description also reveals an until now unknown reception of 17th century Jesuit astronomy, mechanics and physics in post-Byzantine Russia and South-Eastern Europe."--Publisher's description. Local access dig.pdf. [Golvers-verbiest Jesuit science.pdf] |
ISBN | 9789080183391 |
LCCN | 2011475174 |
Author | Schall von Bell, Johann Adam 湯若望, 1592-1666 |
Place | --- |
Publisher | --- |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | Chinese 中文 |
Type | Book (Text in Collection) |
Series | |
Shelf | Hallway Cases |
Call Number | BX1665.A2 Y47 2002 v. 6 |
Description | v.6 p. 465-544 |
Note | In: 耶穌會羅馬檔案館明清天主教文獻. Chinese Christian texts from the Roman Archives of the Society of Jesus, v. 6.30. Min li pu zhu jie huo 民曆鋪註解惑 / Tang Ruowang 湯若望 (Johann Adam Schall von Bell) Full bibliographic citations see: Ad Dudink & Nicolas Standaert, Chinese Christian Texts Database (CCT-Database).
JapSin II, 39 MS One juan. Manuscript written on silk paper with red square frames, bound in one volume, European style, with Chinese and Arabic numbers on the folios. 28.4 x 16.3 cm. The Latin inscription on the cover reads: “De electio dierum et alii additis in kalenda | rio (auctoribus Schall et Verbiest) MS. pretiosissimum!”Folios 1–3 contain the preface of Hu Shi’an 胡世安, the preface written by Adam Schall himself and the table of contents. The manuscript consists of the folios 1–20. There are ten columns in each half folio, with twenty-two characters in each column. A comparison between our manuscript and the printed edition in Jap-Sin II, 39.8 shows that: 1. The preface of Hu Shi’an (folio 1) is exactly the same as in the printed edition. Source: Albert Chan, S.J., Chinese Books and Documents in the Jesuit Archives in Rome, pp. 333-334. |
Author | Verbiest, Ferdinand 南懷仁, 1623-1688 |
Place | [Beijing] [北京] |
Publisher | --- |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | Chinese 中文 |
Type | Digital Book (PDF) |
Series | |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | Dig. [QB36.V36 X56 1674d] |
Description | Dig. pdf & jpg |
Note | Xinzhi yixiang tu 新製儀象圖 = Liber organicus astronomiae Europaeae apud Sinas restitutae sub imperatore Sino-Tartarico Cam Hy appellato auctore P. Ferdinando Verbiest Flandro - Belga Brugensi e Societate Jesu Academiae Astronomicae in regia Pekinensi praefecto anno salutis M. DCLXVIII [1668] / Nan Huairen zhi南懷仁製. Library has two digital editions. One from edition displayed at the Galleons & Globalizations exhibition (USF 2010). In two parts with separate covers, partially disbound. Latin t.p. missing. Digitized with permission. 2nd (BnF) ed. online at Gallica. For full bibliographic citation see: See Ad Dudink & Nicolas Standaert, Chinese Christian Texts Database (CCT-Database) |
Author | Verbiest, Ferdinand 南懷仁, 1623-1688 |
Place | --- |
Publisher | --- |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | Chinese 中文 |
Type | Digital Book |
Series | |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | NOT HELD. DESCRIPTION ONLY |
Description | [14 juan in 16 ce]. |
Note | Full bibliographic citation see: Ad Dudink & Nicolas Standaert, Chinese Christian Texts Database (CCT-Database).
JapSin II, 42, I. II. III. The cover bears a label with the title of the book and a Latin inscription: “Theoria, usus, fabrica instru | mentorum Mathematicorum | variis tabulis stellarum | longitud. latit. cir. inclinationum | eclipticae etc. | a p. Ferdin. Verbiest, S.J. | continet 14. tomos.” Another Latin inscription reads: “Opera | mathematica | Patrum NN. | rarissima | pro curia | imperiali edita.”There is a preface (thirteen folios) by Verbiest, dated Kangxi 13 (1674) and a memorial of Verbiest to the emperor and the latter’s reply (four and one-half folios in all; the numbers marked in the middle of these folios are: 133, 134, 135, 136, and 137). The table of contents consist of five folios. Folio 1a of juan 1 mentions the title of the book with the number of juan, the author: 治理曆法極西南懷仁著 and the collaborators: Liu Yunde 右監副劉蘊德筆受, Sun Youben and Xu Hu 春官正孫有本,秋官徐瑚詳受 (these three persons are also the collaborators of juan 2, 3, 4, 5 and 12).
Folio 1a of juan 2 bears three large Chinese characters: 儀象志 (A record of the astronomical instruments); they appear also in juan 3–4, 6 and 8–13. The collaborators of the other juan (6–11 and 13–14) were: There are nine columns in each half folio with eighteen characters in the first column of each paragraph and seventeen in the rest of the paragraph. Annotations are given in double lines and with smaller characters. The title of the book is given in the middle of each folio, and the number of the juan and of the folio are given below the fish tail. The book consists mainly of tables. In his memorial to the throne Verbiest explained why he wrote this book: When dealing with the [astronomical] instruments one problem is how to make them, and the other is how to use them. Furthermore, there is the problem of how to set them up for permanent use. Unless a full discussion is given with all the details, I am afraid that the knowledge will be confined to myself, and no one will be able to share it. This, to my mind, would be selfish and short sighted. For this reason I have tried to combine old learning with new experiences and, after careful consideration and analysis and by means of a process of inference, I have produced these illustrations, comparing and confirming them by explanations and tables. In all, there are 16 juan, with the title Xinzhi lingtai yixiangzhi [A description of the recently produced astronomical instruments]. It is hoped that the students in the imperial services will learn and understand and thus will find the instruments easy to manage. As to those who are to come after us, they too may do their studies by referring to our books. Your Majesty has been so kind as to allow me to take charge of the Calendar Bureau and in return I feel it my duty to render service to Your Majesty. Furthermore, your servant has one more request. Since this book is laid out clearly in its theoretical and mathematical side and is fully furnished with tables, it is hard to expect that everything will be arranged as neatly as one would wish. For this reason difficulties arise when anyone tries to copy or to draw from the book. Unless it is printed it will be impossible to provide for common use, still less, for the generations to come. I therefore, request your Majesty to give an order to the Ministry [of Works] to have printing blocks made and to deliver these to your servant for the printing of the books, which will be distributed among the students of the Imperial Observatory. The result of this will be that every student in the Academy will be provided with his own copy unfailingly . . .By way of the Ministry of Rites the emperor gave the following reply: The memorial [of Verbiest] was presented to the emperor on the twentieth of the first month of the 13th year of the Kangxi reign [1673]. On the third day of the second month [that same year] the imperial reply came which reads: Both the calendar and astronomy are closely related to the rites. From the memorial [of Verbiest] we have learned that the astronomical instruments are completed and that they have been made with great accuracy. Nan Huairen [Verbiest] had spared no energy in this labor; indeed he deserves high praise. He should be given special honors. Let me know about all the items that are discussed in the memorial [of Verbiest]. Let this be reported to the Ministry [of Personnel]. Enclosed are the [manuscript of] the book [of Verbiest] and the tables.In the Xichao ding’an (Jap-Sin II, 67 II, ce 2, folio 47v) there is a document from the Minister of Personnel, Duihana 對哈納, in which is given the approval obtained from the Kangxi emperor to have Verbiest’s book printed: 該臣(對哈納)議得南懷仁奏稱臣指授嘔心,業將諸儀安列於觀象臺上。以故覃精研慮,繪圖表次,為一十六卷。名曰新製靈臺儀象志,是書樊然不齊也,使非板行勢難盡人而給,且無以遺久。祈仰[束+力]部鏤板一副,交臣印刷,以資給發官生,則守是掌者,皆手習一編,而無缺餘(如?)之憾矣……康熙十三年二月二十日題,本月二十四日奉旨依議,欽此,遵。In 1674 Verbiest was appointed Director of the Imperial Observatory (欽天監監正) and given the rank of Vice-Minister of the Court of Imperial Sacrifices (太常寺少卿) as a reward for his achievements (see JWC 2:176, quoting from the Zhengjiao fengbao 正教奉褒). One of the proofreaders in juan 6, Jiao Bingzhen 焦秉貞, was an accomplished painter at the imperial court. He was the artist who painted the forty-six paintings in the 1696 edition of the Gengzhitu 耕織圖 (Pictures on Tilling and Weaving, cf. ECCP, p. 329). He was well known as a portrait painter after the European technique. We do not know who his instructor was, but his frequent relations with the missioners must have had a great influence on him in European art. The Gujin tushu jicheng 古今圖書集成, section Lifadian 曆法典 (On the calendar), contains this book of Verbiest in seven juan (89–95), the last three juan consisting of illustrations (Taipei reprint, 1980, vol. 4, pp. 995–1034). Juan Yuan (1764–1849) lists the Xinzhi lingtai yixiangzhi as in sixteen juan (CJC, juan 45, ce 5, p. 592). Actually there are only fourteen juan. This mistake is perhaps due to the fact that there are sixteen ce in the whole book. Cf. Couplet, p. 42; Pfister, p. 353–354; Hsü 1949, pp. 465–469; JWC 2:163–179. See also NBC, p. 240; Van Hée 1913, pp. 3–4; ECCP 1:569 (Mei Gucheng); Joseph Needham, Science and Civilization in China, vol. III, pp. 451–452; Zhongguo tianwenxueshi 中國天文學史 (Beijing, 1981), pp. 230-231. |