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Astrolabe with inscriptions in Gothic and Arabic

Jean Fusoris (instrument builder)1390 – 1436

MAS

MAS
Antwerp, Belgium

The astrolabe was developed as early as the third or second century BC. The Greeks and Romans used the instrument to determine the position of the stars. During the late Middle Ages, it also came to be used as a navigational instrument on board ships. The Latin word astrolabium comes from the Greek 'astron labein', meaning 'to measure a star'.

Details

  • Title: Astrolabe with inscriptions in Gothic and Arabic
  • Creator: Jean Fusoris (instrument builder)
  • Date Created: 1390 – 1436
  • Location: France
  • Physical Dimensions: height: 3.5cm – diameter: 16.3cm – width: 20cm
  • Subject Keywords: Maritime collection
  • Type: Astrolabe
  • Medium: Copper
  • ID: AS.1943.009.127
  • Department: MAS Collection – Maritime
  • Acquisition: Transferred from Museum Steen (Antwerp) (1943)

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