
Observatory Sites & Networks Since 1780
This research networking project consisted of four workshops that brought together UK and international scholars who research observatory histories with curators, educators, astronomers and others who work within relevant sites today.
Last updated: 22 August 2023
About the project
This AHRC Network Grant is a collaboration between Royal Museums Greenwich and National Museums Scotland. Discover more about the Observatory Sites and Networks since 1780 project.
The project aimed to inspire future collaborative research into the collections, archive material and architecture of historic observatories and to provide support and inspiration for curatorial colleagues as we consider the long-term legacy of these sites of astronomical heritage and explore how best to bring their stories to life for future audiences.
Lead image: Hand-coloured aquatint of the Calton Hill Observatory by Robert Barker in 1790.
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- Project title
Observatory Sites & Networks Since 1780
- Project active
2021 - 2023
- Research theme
Material Culture: Creation and Use, Scientific sites and networks
Contributors
Dr Louise Devoy - Principal Investigator - Senior Curator, Royal Observatory Greenwich
Dr Rebekah Higgitt - Co-Investigator - Principal Curator of Science, National Museums Scotland
Partners
Cambridge University Library
Royal Observatory Edinburgh
Armagh Observatory
Planetarium Funder: AHRC Network Grant
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Workshop themes
Absorbing, adapting and influencing new technologies
December 2021, online
Explored the processes by which new disciplines, techniques and instrumentation were taken up within observatories in the 19th and 20th centuries and how they were influenced by local, national, imperial and international contexts.
Living and working at the observatory
March 2022, Cambridge
Considered observatories as workplaces and homes, investigating the experiences and opportunities of the men, women and children connected to them, from directors and assistants to families and hired labour.
Historic observatory networks
June 2022, Edinburgh
Explored connections between observatories, which relied on the circulation of knowledge, texts, instruments and people, and the relationships between national, provincial, colonial and amateur observatories.
Contemporary observatory networks
September 2022, Armagh
Focussed on current opportunities and challenges in the preservation and interpretation of observatory sites, learning from previous experience and drawing on the histories explored in the previous workshops.
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Project contact
Dr Rebekah Higgitt