Tablas alfonsíes (Spanish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Tablas alfonsíes" in Spanish language version.

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doi.org

dx.doi.org

  • José Chabás; Goldstein, Bernard R. (mayo de 2016). «The Moon in the Oxford Tables of 1348». Journal for the History of Astronomy (en inglés) (Cambridge) 47 (2): 160. ISSN 0021-8286. doi:10.1177/0021828616645769. «the Alfonsine Tables originated in Castile in the thirteenth century, their widespread diffusion began in Paris in the 1320s. The principal astronomers in Paris who participated in this enterprise were John Vimond, John of Murs, John of Lignères, and John of Saxony. The success of their efforts is evident from the large number and geographical spread of copies and printed editions, to the point that all later astronomers in Europe, well into the sixteenth century, used these tables for their computations, including Copernicus». 
  • Kunitzsch, Paul (mayo 1986). «The Star Catalogue Commonly Appended to the Alfonsine Tables». Journal for the History of Astronomy (en inglés) 17 (2): 90. ISSN 0021-8286. doi:10.1177/002182868601700202. Consultado el 11 de abril de 2022. 
  • Nothaft, C Philipp E. (Febrero de 2015). «Critical Analysis of The Alfonsine Tables in the Fourteenth Century: The Parisian Expositio Tabularum Alfonsii of 1347». Journal for the History of Astronomy (en inglés) (Cambridge) 46 (1): 76-99. ISSN 0021-8286. doi:10.1177/0021828614551491. «the period from c . 1320 to c . 1550 would doubtlessly have to be labelled the 'Alfonsine age', transfixed as it was by the influence of the Alfonsine Tables [...] Almagest , which in reality were much less accurate than the pre- and post-dictions yielded by the Alfonsine Tables». 

harvard.edu

articles.adsabs.harvard.edu

issn.org

portal.issn.org

  • José Chabás; Goldstein, Bernard R. (mayo de 2016). «The Moon in the Oxford Tables of 1348». Journal for the History of Astronomy (en inglés) (Cambridge) 47 (2): 160. ISSN 0021-8286. doi:10.1177/0021828616645769. «the Alfonsine Tables originated in Castile in the thirteenth century, their widespread diffusion began in Paris in the 1320s. The principal astronomers in Paris who participated in this enterprise were John Vimond, John of Murs, John of Lignères, and John of Saxony. The success of their efforts is evident from the large number and geographical spread of copies and printed editions, to the point that all later astronomers in Europe, well into the sixteenth century, used these tables for their computations, including Copernicus». 
  • Torres López, diciembre de 2009, pp. 746-747. Torres López, Carmen (diciembre de 2009). «La obra astronómica de Alfonso X el Sabio en el fondo bibliográfico del Museo Naval». Revista General de Marina. ISSN 0034-9569. 
  • Kunitzsch, Paul (mayo 1986). «The Star Catalogue Commonly Appended to the Alfonsine Tables». Journal for the History of Astronomy (en inglés) 17 (2): 90. ISSN 0021-8286. doi:10.1177/002182868601700202. Consultado el 11 de abril de 2022. 
  • Nothaft, C Philipp E. (Febrero de 2015). «Critical Analysis of The Alfonsine Tables in the Fourteenth Century: The Parisian Expositio Tabularum Alfonsii of 1347». Journal for the History of Astronomy (en inglés) (Cambridge) 46 (1): 76-99. ISSN 0021-8286. doi:10.1177/0021828614551491. «the period from c . 1320 to c . 1550 would doubtlessly have to be labelled the 'Alfonsine age', transfixed as it was by the influence of the Alfonsine Tables [...] Almagest , which in reality were much less accurate than the pre- and post-dictions yielded by the Alfonsine Tables». 

mde.es

armada.mde.es

proquest.com

  • «Alfonsine tables». Hutchinson Encyclopedia (en inglés) (Abingdon: RM Education, Ltd.). 2020. Consultado el 7 de abril de 2022. «The Alfonsine tables were the most important astronomical tables until the 16th century». 
  • Bernard R. Goldstein (2019). «The Alfonsine Tables in Hebrew». Historical Studies in Science & Judaism (en inglés) (Jerusalén: Aleph) 19 (2): 269. Consultado el 7 de abril de 2022. «These tables were conveyed to Paris, where they were recast into Latin in what are now called the Parisian Alfonsine Tables». 

ucm.es

web.archive.org