This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.

IN 1609, Galileo, then Professor of Mathematics at Padua, in the service of the Venetian Republic, heard from a correspondent at Paris of the invention of a telescope, and set to work to consider how such an instrument could be made. The result was his invention of the telescope known by his name, and identical in principle with the modern opera-glass The "Galilean telescope" uses a convex objective lens and a concave eyepiece, providing an upright image, unlike the later Keplerian telescope which flips the image.. In a maritime and warlike State, the advantages to be expected from such an invention were immediately recognised, and Galileo was rewarded with a confirmation of his Professorship for life, and a handsome stipend, in recognition of his invention and construction of the first telescope seen at Venice. In his pamphlet, The Sidereal Messenger Original Latin title: Sidereus Nuncius., here translated, Galileo relates how he came to learn the value of the telescope for astronomical research; and how his observations were rewarded by numerous discoveries in rapid succession, and at