- Agnes Mary Clerke
Agnes Mary Clerke (
10 February ,1842 –20 January ,1907 ) was anastronomer andwriter , mainly in the field ofastronomy . She was born atSkibbereen ,County Cork ,Ireland , and died inLondon . [For details of the life and work of Agnes Clerk, see cite journal | author = Weitzenhoffer, Kenneth | title = The Prolific Pen of Agnes Clerke | journal = Sky and Telescope | year = 1985 | volume = | issue = 9 | pages = 211 – 212]Life and work
Agnes Clerke was interested in astronomy from an early age, and had begun to write about it before the age of 15. In 1861 her family moved to
Dublin , and in 1863 to Queenstown. Several years later she went toItaly where she stayed until 1877, chiefly atFlorence , studying at the public library and preparing for literary work. In 1877 she settled in London.Her first important article, "Copernicus in Italy", was published in the "Edinburgh Review" in October 1877. She achieved a world-wide reputation in 1885, on the appearance of her exhaustive treatise, "A Popular History of Astronomy during the Nineteenth Century". Clerke was not a practical astronomer, instead collating, interpreting and summarising the results of astronomical research. In 1888 she spent three months at the
Cape Observatory as the guest of the director, SirDavid Gill , and his wife, and there became sufficiently familiar with spectroscopic work to be enabled to write about this newer branch of the science with increased clearness and confidence.In 1892 she was awarded the
Actonian Prize of 100 guineas by theRoyal Institution . As a member of theBritish Astronomical Association she attended its meetings regularly, as well as those of theRoyal Astronomical Society . In 1903, with Lady Huggins, she was elected an honorary member of the Royal Astronomical Society, a rank previously held only by two other women,Caroline Herschel andMary Somerville .Her sister,
Ellen Mary Clerke (1840–1906), also wrote about astronomy.The
lunar crater Clerke is named after her.Selected writings
*"A Popular History of Astronomy during the Nineteenth Century". Edinburgh, 1885 (4th rev. ed. London, 1902)
*"The System of the Stars". London, 1890 (2nd ed. London, 1905)
*"The Herschels and Modern Astronomy". London, 1895
*"The Concise Knowledge Astronomy" (co-authored with John Ellard Gore andAlfred Fowler . London, 1898
*"Problems in Astrophysics". London, 1903
*"Modern Cosmogonies". London, 1905
*"Familiar Studies in Homer". London, 1892She also wrote 55 articles for the "
Edinburgh Review ", mainly on subjects connected with astrophysics, and several articles for the "Dictionary of National Biography ", the "Encyclopædia Britannica " and the "Catholic Encyclopedia ", and several other periodicals.References
Firther reading
*cite book
author=Brück, M.T.
title=Agnes Mary Clerke and the Rise of Astrophysics
publisher=Cambridge University Press
location=Cambridge
year=2002
quote=
isbn=0-521-80844-8
oclc=47805069 70727080
doi=10.2277/0521808448
url=
accessdate=
*cite journal
last=Huggins
first=Margaret Lindsay
authorlink=Margaret Lindsay Huggins
year=2007
month=April
title=Agnes Mary Clerke
journal=The Astrophysical Journal
volume=25
issue=1
pages=225–30
publisher=American Astronomical Society
location=Chicago
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=XpksAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=editions:LCCN17024351#PPA225-IA1,M1
format=PDF
accessdate=2008-08-18External links
*cite web
url=http://www.loc.gov/rr/scitech/womenastro/womenastro-c2.html
title=Women in Astronomy: A Comprehensive Bibliography
author=Science Reference Services, Library of Congress
authorlink=Library of Congress
accessdate=2008-08-18 Bibliography of writings about Agnes Mary Clerke.
* [http://www.astrosociety.org/education/resources/womenast_bib02.html#3b Biographical material] from theAstronomical Society of the Pacific
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