Thomas Harriot

Thomas Harriot

Portrait of Thomas Harriot (1602), which hangs in Oriel College, Oxford
Born c. 1560
Oxford, England
Died 2 July 1621 (aged 6061)
London, England
Citizenship English
Fields Astronomy, mathematics, ethnography
Alma mater St Mary Hall, Oxford
Known for

Thomas Harriot (Oxford, ca. 1560 – London, 2 July 1621) — or spelled Harriott, Hariot, or Heriot — was an English astronomer, mathematician, ethnographer, and translator. He is sometimes credited with the introduction of the potato to the British Isles.[1] Harriot was the first person to make a drawing of the Moon through a telescope, on 26 July 1609, over four months before Galileo.[2]

After graduating from St Mary Hall, Oxford, Harriot travelled to the Americas, accompanying the 1585 expedition to Roanoke island funded by Sir Walter Raleigh and led by Sir Ralph Lane. Harriot was a vital member of the venture, having translated and learned the Carolina Algonquian language from two Native Americans, Wanchese and Manteo. On his return to England he worked for the 9th Earl of Northumberland. At the Earl's house, he became a prolific mathematician and astronomer to whom the theory of refraction is attributed.

Biography

Early life and education

Born in 1560 in Oxford, England, Thomas Harriot attended St Mary Hall, Oxford. His name appears in the hall's registry dating from 1577.[3]

Roanoke

Watercolor by John White of Roanoke Indians

After his graduation from Oxford in 1580, Harriot was first hired by Sir Walter Raleigh as a mathematics tutor; he used his knowledge of astronomy/astrology to provide navigational expertise, help design Raleigh's ships, and serve as his accountant. Prior to his expedition with Raleigh, Harriot wrote a treatise on navigation.[4] In addition, he made efforts to communicate with Manteo and Wanchese, two Native Americans who had been brought to England. Harriot devised a phonetic alphabet to transcribe their Carolina Algonquian language.

Harriot and Manteo spent many days in one another's company; Harriot interrogated Manteo closely about life in the New World and learned much that was to the advantage of the English settlers.[5] In addition, he recorded the sense of awe with which the Native Americans viewed European technology:

"Many things they sawe with us...as mathematical instruments, sea compasses...[and] spring clocks that seemed to goe of themselves - and many other things we had - were so strange unto them, and so farre exceeded their capacities to comprehend the reason and meanes how they should be made and done, that they thought they were rather the works of gods than men."[5]

He made only one expedition, around 1585-86, and spent some time in the New World visiting Roanoke Island off the coast of North Carolina, expanding his knowledge by improving his understanding of the Carolina Algonquian language. As the only Englishman who had learned Algonkin prior to the voyage, Harriot was vital to the success of the expedition.[6]

His account of the voyage, named A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia, was published in 1588 (probably written a year before). The True Report contains an early account of the Native American population encountered by the expedition; it proved very influential upon later English explorers and colonists. He wrote: "Whereby it may be hoped, if means of good government be used, that they may in short time be brought to civility and the embracing of true religion." At the same time, his views of Native Americans' industry and capacity to learn were later largely ignored in favour of the parts of the "True Report" about extractable minerals and resources.

As a scientific adviser during the voyage, Harriot was asked by Raleigh to find the most efficient way to stack cannonballs on the deck of the ship. His ensuing theory about the close-packing of spheres shows a striking resemblance to atomism and modern atomic theory, which he was later accused of believing. His correspondence about optics with Johannes Kepler, in which he described some of his ideas, later influenced Kepler's conjecture.

Later years

Harriott was employed for many years by Henry Percy, 9th Earl of Northumberland, with whom he resided at Syon House, which was run by Henry Percy's cousin Thomas Percy.

Harriot's sponsors began to fall from favour: Raleigh was the first, and Harriot's other patron Henry Percy, the Earl of Northumberland, was imprisoned in 1605 in connection with the Gunpowder Plot as he was tclosely connected to one of the conspirators, Thomas Percy.

Harriot himself was interrogated and briefly imprisoned but was soon released. Walter Warner, Robert Hues, William Lower, and other scientists were present around the Earl of Northumberland's mansion as they worked for him and assisted in the teaching of the family's children.[3]

Halley's Comet in 1607 turned Harriot's attention towards astronomy. In early 1609 he bought a "Dutch trunke" (telescope), invented in 1608, and his observations were amongst the first uses of a telescope for astronomy. Harriot is now credited as the first astronomer to draw an astronomical object after viewing it through a telescope: he drew a map of the Moon on 26 July 1609, preceding Galileo by several months.[7][8][9][10] He also observed sunspots in December 1610.[11]

Death

In 1615 or 1616, Harriot wrote to an unknown friend with medical expertise, describing what would have been the reason for the eruption of a cancerous ulcer on his lip. This progressed until 1621, when he was living with a friend named Thomas Buckner on Threadneedle Street, where he died. Sources cited below are among several that describe his condition as a cancer of the nose. In either case, Harriot apparently died from skin cancer.

He died on 2 July 1621, three days after writing his will (discovered by Henry Stevens).[12] His executors posthumously published his Artis Analyticae Praxis on algebra in 1631; Nathaniel Torporley was the intended executor of Harriot's wishes, but Walter Warner in the end pulled the book into shape.[13] It may be a compendium of some of his works but does not represent all that he left unpublished (more than 400 sheets of annotated writing). It isn't directed in a way that follows the manuscripts and it fails to give the full significance of Harriot's writings.[3]

Legacy

He also studied optics and refraction, and apparently discovered Snell's law 20 years before Snellius did, although it was previously discovered by Ibn Sahl; like so many of his works, this remained unpublished. In Virginia he learned the local Algonquian language, which may have had some effect on his mathematical thinking. He founded the "English school" of algebra. He is also credited with discovering Girard's theorem, although the formula bears Girard's name as he was the first to publish it.[14]

Lord Egremont unveils a Plaque commemorating Thomas Harriot at Syon House, West London (July 2009)

His algebra book Artis Analyticae Praxis[15] (1631) was published posthumously in Latin. Unfortunately the editors did not understand much of his reasoning and removed the parts they did not comprehend such as the negative and complex roots of equations. Because of the dispersion of Harriot's writings the full annotated English translation of the Praxis was not completed until 2007.[16]

The first biography of Harriot was written in 1876 by Henry Stevens of Vermont but not published until 1900[12] fourteen years after his death. The publication was limited to 167 copies and so the work was not widely known until 1972 when a reprint edition appeared.[17] Interest in Harriot revived with the convening of a symposium at the University of Delaware in April, 1971 with the proceedings published by the Oxford University Press in 1974.[18] John W. Shirley the editor (1908-1988) went on to publish A Sourcebook for the Study of Thomas Harriot (1981)[19] and his Harriot biography (1983).[20] The papers of John Shirley have been deposited in the University of Delaware Library.[21]

Harriot's accomplishments remain relatively obscure because he did not publish any of his results and also because many of his manuscripts have been lost; those that survive are sheltered in the British Museum and in the archives of the Percy family at Petworth House (Sussex) and Alnwick Castle (Northumberland).

The Thomas Harriot Plaque in the grounds of Syon House (W. London).

An event was held at Syon House, West London, to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Harriot's first observations of the moon on 26 July 2009. This event, Telescope400,[22] included the unveiling of a plaque to commemorate Harriot by Lord Egremont. The plaque can now be seen by visitors to Syon House, the location of Harriot's historic observations. His drawing made 400 years earlier is believed to be based on the first ever observations of the moon through a telescope. The event (sponsored by the Royal Astronomical Society) was run as part of the International Year of Astronomy (IYA).

The original documents showing Harriot's moon map of c. 1611, observations of Jupiter's satellites, and first observations of sunspots were on display at the Science Museum, London, from 23 July 2009 until the end of IYA.[23]

The observatory in the campus of the College of William and Mary is named in Harriot's honour. A crater on the Moon was belatedly named after him in 1970; it is on the Moon's far side and hence unobservable from Earth.

The Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences at East Carolina University in Greenville, NC is named in recognition of this Harriot's scientific contributions to the New World such as his work A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia.[5]

See also

Bibliography

References

  1. "Sir Walter Raleigh - American colonies". Archived from the original on 26 May 2012.
  2. "Celebrating Thomas Harriot, the world's first telescopic astronomer (RAS PN 09/47)". ras.org.uk. 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Stedall, Jacqueline (2003) The Greate Invention of Algebra, Oxford University Press. p.3, ISBN 0-19-852602-4.
  4. Jehlen, Myra & Michael Warner (1997) The English Literatures of America, 1500-1800, Routledge (UK) p.64, ISBN 0-415-91903-7.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Milton, p.73
  6. Milton, p.89
  7. By 1613 Harriot had created two maps of the whole moon, with many identifiable features such as lunar craters depicted in their correct relative positions that were not to be improved upon for several decades.
  8. History Corrected by 400 Year Old Moon Map Live Science 14 January 2009
  9. Christine McGourty, English Galileo' maps on display, 14 January 2009
  10. The Galileo Project: Thomas Harriot, Thomas Harriot's Moon Drawings
  11. The Galileo Project: Thomas Harriot (1560-1621)
  12. 12.0 12.1 Stevens, Henry. (1900) Thomas Hariot, the Mathematician, the Philosopher and the Scholar, Privately printed at the Chiswick press
  13. Helena Mary Pycior, Symbols, Impossible Numbers, and Geometric Entanglements (1997), pp. 55-6.
  14. Richeson, David. (2008) Euler's Gem, Princeton University Press, p.91,
  15. Artis analyticae praxis (1631)
  16. Thomas Harriot’s Artis analyticae praxis, New York: Springer, 2007
  17. Thomas Hariot, the mathematician, the philosopher, and the scholar (1972)
  18. Thomas Harriot; Renaissance scientist (1974), edited by John W. Shirley
  19. A Sourcebook for the Study of Thomas Harriot (1981) by John W. Shirley
  20. Thomas Harriot, a Biography by John W. Shirley (1983)
  21. John Shirley Papers related to Thomas Harriot (22 linear feet)
  22. Telescope400 – celebrating Thomas Harriot's first ever use of the Telescope in Astronomy
  23. Hannah Devlin, Galileo was beaten to the Moon by a shy Englishman, The Times, 24 July 2009

Sources

External links

Works by Thomas Harriot

Works or sites about Thomas Harriot