Apian, Petrus, Cosmographia

Table of handwritten notes

< >
[Handwritten note 1]
[Handwritten note 2]
[Handwritten note 3]
[Handwritten note 4]
[Handwritten note 5]
[Handwritten note 6]
[Handwritten note 7]
[Handwritten note 8]
[Handwritten note 5]
[Handwritten note 6]
[Handwritten note 7]
[Handwritten note 8]
[Handwritten note 5]
[Handwritten note 6]
[Handwritten note 7]
[Handwritten note 8]
[Handwritten note 5]
[Handwritten note 6]
[Handwritten note 7]
[Handwritten note 8]
[Handwritten note 9]
[Handwritten note 10]
[Handwritten note 11]
[Handwritten note 12]
[Handwritten note 11]
[Handwritten note 12]
[Handwritten note 13]
[Handwritten note 14]
[Handwritten note 15]
[Handwritten note 16]
< >
page |< < (Fo.1.) of 140 > >|
7Fo.1.
Prima pars huius libri
de Cosmographiae &
Geographioe
principiis.
QUID SIT COSMOGRAPHIA,
Et quo differat a Geographia & Chorographia.
CAPUT PRIMUM.
COsmographia (ut ex etymo vocabuli pa-
tet) est mundi, qui ex quatuor elementis,
Terra, Aqua, Aëre, &
Igne, Sole quoque, Lu
na, &
omnibus stellis constat, & quicquid
coeli circumflexu tegitur, descriptio.
Impri-
mis enim contemplatur Circulos, ex quibus
illa supercoelestis Sphaera componi intelli-
gitur.
Deinde ex ipsorum distinctione, ter-
rarũ illis subiectarum situs, &
locorum sym
metriam seu commenſurationẽ, Rationem insuper Climatum, Die-
rum, Noctiumque diversitates, Quatuor mundi Cardines, Stellarum
quoque fixarum necnon errantium Motus, Ortus, &
Occasus, & qui
bus verticales moventur, &
quaecunque ad coeli rationem pertinent,
ut Poli elevationes, Paralelos, &
Meridianos circulos, & caetera iuxta
Mathematicas ostensiones demõſtrat.
Et a Geographia differt, quia
terram distinguit tantum per Circulos coeli, non per montes, maria,
&
flumina, & c.
¶De hac re sume sequentem deliniatam formulam,
hoc enim Typo totius Cosmographiae
descriptio demonstratur.

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index