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Astronomer Royal
Position in the Royal Households of the United Kingdom
Position in the Royal Households of the United Kingdom
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Astronomer Royal is a senior post in the Royal Households of the United Kingdom. There are two officers, the senior being the Astronomer Royal dating from 22 June 1675; the junior is the Astronomer Royal for Scotland dating from 1834.
The Astronomer Royal works to make observations to improve navigation, cartography, instrument design, and applications of geomagnetism. The position was created with the overall goal of discovering a way to determine longitude at sea when out of sight of land. The incumbent Astronomer Royal is Professor Michele Dougherty.
History
The post was created by Charles II in 1675, at the same time as he founded the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. He appointed John Flamsteed, instructing him "." The first six Astronomers Royal dedicated themselves primarily to this task and focused on astronomical observations that would benefit navigation.
The astronomer royal was director of the Royal Observatory, Greenwich from the establishment of the post in 1675 until 1972. The astronomer royal became an honorary title in 1972 without executive responsibilities, and a separate post of director of the Royal Greenwich Observatory was created to manage the institution.
The origin of the title Astronomer Royal is unknown. Although Flamsteed is widely considered the first Astronomer Royal, he was never appointed with the title and only referred to in the Warrant to Ordinance as "Our Astronomical Observer". Similar language was used to appoint all the Astronomers Royal until 1881 with William Christie's appointment. The term Astronomer Royal did not become commonly used until the late 18th Century while the Royal Warrants still used "Our Astronomical Observer". Other titles such as Royal Professor at Greenwich were also used in less formal documents during this time.
In 1703, Isaac Newton was elected President of the Royal Society, and was upset with the lack of publications coming from the Greenwich Observatory under Flamsteed. This eventually led to Queen Anne's Warrant of 1710 where members of the Royal Society were appointed as the Board of Visitors to the Royal Observatory to oversee Flamsteed. The original Board of Visitors consisted entirely of associates and allies of Newton, which enraged Flamsteed.
In 1765, the Board of Longitude decided that the Astronomer Royal's observations were the property of the Crown and must be printed and published each year. John Pond and subsequent Astronomers Royal elected to publish their findings quarterly instead.
Sir George Airy transformed the position from its original purpose of improving navigation to conducting more general astronomical and scientific research. With approval from the Board of Visitors in 1836, Airy created a Magnetic and Meteorological Department in the Royal Observatory Greenwich. Following this, in 1873 he created the Solar Photography Department.
Astronomers Royal are responsible for many different discoveries and theories. They had several assistants who aided work at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. There were also computers, or people that would perform all the mathematical computations required to make observations comparable. In the 19th century, many of these computers were boys and a few were women.
Originally, the Astronomer Royal had one assistant but increased to six during John Pond's tenure as Astronomer Royal**.** The astronomer royal today receives a stipend of 100 GBP per year and is a member of the royal household, under the general authority of the Lord Chamberlain. After the separation of the two offices of Astronomer Royal and Director of the Royal Greenwich Observatory, the position of astronomer royal has been largely honorary, although the holder remains available to advise the Sovereign on astronomical and related scientific matters,{{cite web | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160308012357/http://www.royal.gov.uk/TheRoyalHousehold/OfficialRoyalposts/AstronomerRoyal.aspx | archive-date = 2016-03-08 | url-status = dead | access-date = 2017-06-23
There was formerly a Royal Astronomer of Ireland who was also the Andrews Professor of Astronomy at the University of Dublin. Both became vacant in 1921 with Irish Independence but a new Andrews Professor of Astronomy was appointed in 1985.
Astronomers Royal
| # | Image | Name | Start year | End year | class="unsortable" | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | [[File:John Flamsteed 1702.jpg | 100px]] | John Flamsteed | 1675 | 1719 | ||
| 2. | [[File:Edmond Halley 072.jpg | 100px]] | Edmond Halley | 1720 | 1742 | ||
| 3. | [[File:James Bradley by Thomas Hudson.jpg | 100px]] | James Bradley | 1742 | 1762 | ||
| 4. | [[File:The Reverend Nathaniel Bliss.jpg | 100px]] | Nathaniel Bliss | 1762 | 1764 | ||
| 5. | [[File:Maskelyne Nevil.jpg | 100px]] | Nevil Maskelyne | 1765 | 1811 | ||
| 6. | John Pond | 1811 | 1835 | ||||
| 7. | [[File:George Biddell Airy 1891.jpg | 100px]] | Sir George Biddell Airy | 1835 | 1881 | ||
| 8. | [[File:William H M Christie.jpg | 100px]] | Sir William Christie | 1881 | 1910 | ||
| 9. | [[File:Frank Watson Dyson.jpg | 100px]] | Sir Frank Dyson | 1910 | 1933 | ||
| 10. | Sir Harold Spencer Jones | 1933 | 1955 | ||||
| 11. | Sir Richard van der Riet Woolley | 1956 | 1971 | ||||
| 12. | [[File:Martin Ryle (cropped).jpg | 100px]] | Sir Martin Ryle | 1972 | 1982 | ||
| 13. | [[File:Francis Graham Smith.jpg | 100px]] | Sir Francis Graham-Smith | 1982 | 1990 | ||
| 14. | [[File:SirArnoldWolfendale.jpg | 100px]] | Sir Arnold Wolfendale | 1991 | 1995 | ||
| 15. | [[File:Official portrait of Lord Rees of Ludlow crop 2.jpg | 100px]] | Martin Rees, Baron Rees of Ludlow | 1995 | 2025 | ||
| 16. | [[File:Micheledougherty ras 10apr2015.jpg | 100px]] | Michele Dougherty | 2025 | Incumbent |
Discoveries and works of Astronomers Royal
John Flamsteed is responsible for a few important discoveries including proving his theory of annual stellar parallax and the discovery of the planet Uranus, even though he thought it was a star. In 1694, he gathered evidence of the stellar parallax and became the first person to prove that the Earth revolves around the sun. However, his most significant contribution to the Royal Observatory and later to the Astronomers Royal was his high standard of work.
Six years after the death of Flamsteed, Historia Coelestis Britannica was published containing much of the data and theories he had spent his life working on both before and after his appointment as Astronomer Royal. It contains accurate tables of lunar motion, planetary motion, and detailed stellar catalog of 2935 stars. This publication made the Astronomer Royal and the Royal Observatory, Greenwich internationally renown for precise observation.
Edmond Halley was determined to find a way to find longitude at sea without sight of land. Starting in 1725, Halley while serving as Astronomer Royal and a Commissioner on the Board of Longitude made very detailed and precise observations of the moon. From these observations he was able to show that longitude could be calculated using the moon in 1731. Although the error in his calculations was about 69 miles at the equator, it was more accurate than any other methods until the use of the marine chronometer for finding longitude.
In 1833, John Pond published his catalog of 1113 stars. The catalog contained more stars recorded to a higher accuracy than any other existing publication, and impressed astronomers across Europe.
Another important Astronomer Royal was Sir George Biddell Airy. While still in college at Trinity College, Cambridge, he noticed he was having trouble reading with his left eye. Eventually, his condition would be classified as an astigmatism, but at the time, there was no cure that worked for everyone. After consulting with others who had the same condition, he crafted a lens to refract the light rays and correct the astigmatism. With his experience working with lenses, he spent considerable time as the Astronomer Royal improving the measuring instruments in the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. Using these improved instruments, he meticulously double-checked measurements and discoveries made by past astronomers.
Frank Dyson, the ninth Astronomer Royal, determined latitude variation caused by irregular movement of Earth's magnetic poles. He used a telescope floating in mercury and was able to detect when the poles of the earth wobbled greater than one foot. During the 1919 eclipse, Dyson was crucial in designing the Eddington experiment with Arthur Eddington to test Albert Einstein's Theory of relativity. Starting months before the eclipse, stars were photographed and carefully charted, and during the total eclipse the same stars would be photographed and charted again. If Einstein's theory was correct then the light from the selected stars would be bent passing around the sun and show more deflection than Newtonian theory alone predicted. When the photographs from the eclipse were developed it became clear that Einstein's theory had accurately predicted the position of stars. This was one of the first experiments to confirm general relativity.
In popular culture
The astronomer royal is mentioned in H. G. Wells' novel The War of the Worlds, in George Orwell's Down and Out in Paris and London, and in Thomas Pynchon's novel *Mason & Dixon. *He also makes an appearance in the lyrics of *Gilbert and Sullivan'''s The Pirates of Penzance and plays an important role in Fred Hoyle's novel *The Black Cloud''.
References
References
- F Baily, "An Account of the Rev. John Flamsteed", reprinted in [https://books.google.com/books?id=48L1w21XYI4C&pg=PA293 vol. 28, at p. 293]. "The Museum of foreign literature, science and art", R Walsh et al., publ. E Litell, 1836.
- Forbes, Eric G.. (1975). "Greenwich Observatory, volume 1: Origins and Early History (1675–1835)". Taylor & Francis.
- McCrea, William Hunter. (1975). "Royal Greenwich Observatory : an Historical Review Issued on the Occasion of its Tercentenary". Her Majesty's Stationery Office.
- Forbes, Eric Gray. (1975). "Greenwich observatory". Taylor and Francis.
- Meadows, A. J.. (1975). "Greenwich Observatory, volume 2: Recent History (1836–1975)". Taylor & Francis.
- Lovell, Bernard. (1994). "The Royal Society, the Royal Greenwich Observatory and the Astronomer Royal". Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London.
- Ronan, Colin. (1969). "Astronomers Royal". Doubleday and Company.
- Ronan, Colin (1969). ''Astronomers Royal''. New York: Doubleday and Company. pp. 44–45.
- Forbes, Eric G.. (1975). "Greenwich Observatory, volume 1: Origins and Early History (1675–1835)". Taylor & Francis.
- Maunder, E. Walter. (1900). "The Royal Observatory Greenwich". The Religious Tract Society.
- Mullen, Kane. (2020). "Temporary Measures: Women Computers at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, 1890–1895". Journal for the History of Astronomy.
- Dolan, Graham. (2014–2025). "People – a guide to grading and staffing structures".
- Wayman, P.A.. (March 1986). "The Andrews Professors of Astronomy and Dunsink Observatory, 1785-1985". Irish Astronomical Journal.
- (2025-07-29). "UK gets first female Astronomer Royal in 350 years".
- Armitage, Angus. (1946). "Our First Astronomer Royal—the Tercentenary of John Flamsteed". Science Progress (1933- ).
- Schaffer, S.. (July 1984). "The Preface to John Flamsteed's Historia Coelestis Britannica (Book): Annals of Science". Annals of Science.
- Forbes, Eric G.. (1975). "Greenwich Observatory, volume 1: Origins and Early History (1675–1835)". Taylor & Francis.
- Ronan, Colin (1969). ''Astronomers Royal''. New York: Doubleday and Company. pp. 129.
- Levene, John R.. (1966). "Sir George Biddell Airy, F.R.S. (1801-1892) and the Discovery and Correction of Astigmatism". Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London.
- Hill, Geo. A.. (1892). "Sir George Biddell Airy". Science.
- Wilson, Margaret. (1951). "Ninth Astronomer Royal". W.Heffer and Sons Limited.
- Wilson, Margaret (1951). ''Ninth Astronomer Royal''. Cambridge, England: W.Heffer and Sons Limited. pp. 191–193.
- p. 175, Penguin edition
- ch. 11, Picador/Holt edition
- "The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan".
- Burchell, Tania. (February 8, 2020). "The Black Cloud: Scientists in Science Fiction".
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