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Alexander Jamiesons Celestial Atlas appeared in February 1822, with a second edition following in September that same year.

For all the fame that the Atlas achieved, its author remains little known. He evidently had a wide knowledge of science, mathematics and languages, for he wrote a number of educational works on subjects as diverse as cartography, logic, rhetoric, algebra, mechanics and hydrostatics as well as editing a Latin dictionary and running a series of private schools. Early life Jamieson was born in Rothesay on the Isle of Bute, west Scotland, in 1782, the son of a wheelwright. He obtained MA and LLD degrees from Marischal College, Aberdeen, in 1821 and 1823. In 1825 he became a mature student at St Johns College Cambridge but there is no record that he ever resided there or obtained any degree. In fact, he seems to have spent most of his working life in and around London as a writer, teacher and finally an actuary. His first major book, A Treatise on the Construction of Maps, appeared in 1814. In its Preface he gives his address as Wells Street, off Oxford Street in central London. In 1820 he married Frances Thurtle (17791870) in Kensington, an upmarket area of west central London. Frances was an author of travel and historical books, and they both had the same London publisher. It is while he was at Kensington that we first hear of him running his own school. Jamieson the schoolmaster

Jamieson was still living and teaching at Kensington in 1822 when he published his Celestial Atlas, but he and his school were soon on the move. In 1824, he described himself as Master of Heston House Classical and Mathematical School near Hounslow, in Middlesex, just west of London. An advertisement for the school emphasized strict discipline and a strong work ethic combined with religious and moral instruction, probably indicative of Jamiesons own upbringing. In 1826 he had moved again, a few miles east from Heston to Wyke House in Sion Hill (the modern-day Syon Lane), southeast of Osterley Park, to set up Wyke House School, where he remained for the next twelve years. This account of an examination of the scholars for the annual prizegiving tells us more about Wyke House and its activities. An advertisement for the school in January 1838 announces: Dr Jamieson boards and educates young gentlemen in the Greek and Roman Classics, the various branches of pure and mixed Mathematics, Commercial, Geographical and Astronomical Science, and General Literature, with all the necessary parts of a liberal, intellectual, and systematic education. Unfortunately, this attempt to attract more pupils was already too late because Jamieson was declared bankrupt in March that year. He left Wyke House, which became a mental hospital. Jamieson subsequently worked as an actuary with a series of life assurance companies but did not seem to stay in any post for long. However, this experience led to his final book, Report on the constitution and operations of life assurance societies (1841). He later moved to Belgium and died in Bruges in July 1850. The Celestial Atlas editions Of all Jamiesons many publications, it is his Celestial Atlas that is best remembered. By the time it appeared Jamieson was evidently well connected for he obtained royal approval to dedicate it to the king of England, George IV. Two editions were produced in rapid succession, one dated February 1822 and the other September 1822. The star charts in both editions appear identical even obvious labelling errors such as Herscelii for Herschelii on Plate 4 and Fyxis for Pyxis on Plate 26 went uncorrected. The only significant change seems to have been the insertion of an unnumbered plate after the Preface illustrating Egyptian and Hindu zodiacs. The second edition was later reprinted on thinner paper and with a somewhat smaller page size (earlier printings had had overly generous margins). No date is given for this reprint, but on its title page Jamiesons name has the post-nominal letters LLD in place of the previous AM, so he had evidently obtained his doctorate of law in the meantime. An advertisement for the Celestial Atlas in the London Literary Gazette of 7 February 1824 describes it as just published, so a date of late 1823 or early 1824 seems probable. Confusingly, though, the title page of this reprint still bears the date of first publication, i.e. 1 February 1822. The Celestial Atlas charts Jamiesons Celestial Atlas was an attempt to produce a British version of the highly popular atlases of Jean Fortin in France and Johann Bode in Germany, and it followed the same plan as those. Twenty six plates cover the sky down to declinations between 37 and 42 (the southern limit varies from chart to chart, the most southerly of all being on Chart 27). Two more plates are complete celestial hemispheres, another shows only the brightest stars in the northern hemisphere to aid direction-finding, and the last

contains diagrams of the Moon, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. Jamieson explains in the Preface that he had originally planned much larger charts, but had to reduce them in size because of cost. As published, they are the same size as the charts in the atlases of Fortin and Bode, i.e. approximately 9 inches wide by 7 inches high (22.5 by 17.5 cm) with slight variations from plate to plate. Jamieson also adopted Bodes innovation of drawing boundary lines snaking freeform between the constellation figures. Jamiesons charts differed most noticeably from those of Fortin and Bode in his modelling of the constellation figures. Whereas Fortin and Bode closely followed the depictions in Flamsteeds Atlas Coelestis, Jamieson allowed himself greater artistic freedom. His figures were more realistically drawn, notably in his improvements on Flamsteeds unconvincing portrayals of Lacerta, Lynx, Cancer, Scorpius and the frankly ugly Canis Major. Overall, Jamiesons figures are more appealing than those of his predecessors. More than 100 constellations are included, mostly the same as those shown by Bode. Jamieson also introduced three constellations of his own devising: Norma Nilotica (Plate 21), a rod held by Aquarius, presumably for measuring the depth of the Nile; Noctua, the night owl (Plate 27), which took the place of the Solitaire; while on his chart of the southern skies he quietly replaced Lacailles Reticulum with Solarium, the sundial. Facsimiles of Jamiesons charts were published in 1989 as part of a book called Men, Monsters and the Modern Universe by George Lovi and Wil Tirion. As well as the charts, Jamiesons Atlas contained a substantial amount of text including descriptions of the constellations, lists of the main stars with positions for the year 1820 and exercises for students. A scan of the entire first edition, attractively hand coloured, from the Linda Hall Library in Kansas City, can be seen here. Another copy of the charts, from the US Naval Observatorys collection, can be seen here, while charts from the second edition can be seen here. The thumbnails at the bottom of this page link to the US Naval Observatory scans. Thanks to them all for making these scans freely available. Follow-up In 1824 Jamieson published a follow-up called An Atlas of Outline Maps of the Heavens. This consisted of 28 charts the same size as those in his Celestial Atlas (26 constellation charts and two hemispheres) depicting the outlines of the constellation figures only. Students were expected to position the stars on the charts for themselves by reference to his Celestial Atlas. The idea seems not to have caught on and this starfree atlas remains a little-known curiosity. Jamiesons Atlas inspired an attractive set of constellation cards called Uranias Mirror which appeared around 1825. These cards are now better known than the original Atlas. I have written about them on a separate page. It is a pleasure to thank Elizabeth Dolan of Manly, Queensland, Australia, and Fiona Colbert, biographical librarian of St Johns College Cambridge, for their help with research into the life of Alexander Jamieson.

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