Inside the Stargazer's Palace, 9780861549818
Paperback
Magic and science intertwine in a dazzling, forgotten world of discovery.
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Inside the Stargazer's Palace

the transformation of science in 16th-century northern europe

$34.96

  • Paperback

    304 pages

  • Release Date

    1 December 2025

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Summary

Inside the Stargazer’s Palace: A Journey into Sixteenth-Century Science

Enter the mysterious world of sixteenth-century science, where astronomers and alchemists shared laboratories…

‘There is magic in these pages.’ - Daisy Dunn, author of The Missing Thread

In 1543, Nicolaus Copernicus declared the earth revolved around the Sun, overturning centuries of scholastic presumption. A new age was coming into view – one guided by observation, technology and logic.

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780861549818
ISBN-10:0861549813
Author:Violet Moller
Publisher:Oneworld Publications
Imprint:Oneworld Publications
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:304
Release Date:1 December 2025
Weight:266g
Dimensions:198mm x 129mm x 22mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

‘Moller continues the story of science’s spread, shifting her lens northward and tightening her frame to the 16th century… It’s an appealing method: follow the stories of the people, but imagine visiting the places, which are handsomely evoked… [a] pacy narrative By the end, I wanted to visit all these places.’ —Spectator

‘In her lucid account of this transformative age, the historian and podcaster Violet Moller shows how the two strands – the practical and the hermetic and magical – interacted and informed one another.’ —New Statesman

A scintillating journey into a world where discoveries rip through doctrine like meteors. There is magic in these pages.’ —Daisy Dunn, author of The Missing Thread

‘An entertaining survey of the facilities used by 15th and 16th-century scientists… Ms. Moller’s affection for her often chaotic but inspiring subjects is palpable. To her, they represent a legacy of interdisciplinary daring, a willingness to cross geographic and intellectual boundaries as well as to fuse theory and practice. Scientists today, confined to their often narrowly defined fields, would do well to keep their efforts in mind.’ —Wall Street Journal

‘In this fascinating study of the early scientific revolution, when experimental thought was beginning to emerge from Medieval scholasticism, Violet Moller brings to life the trailblazers of this new age.’ —Paul Strathern, author of The Other Renaissance

Violet Moller captures something vital. Northern scholars did indeed build new communities of inquiry, whose members irritated and inspired one another. Lines of communication were fragile, but they buzzed with striking messages… Behind the painted facades of merchant houses, in basements and attics, on the towers and terraces built for Wilhelm IV and Tycho, new paths were being beaten to the forbidding door of the greatest palace of all, that of Nature herself.’ —Times Literary Supplement

Inside the Stargazer’s Palace takes the reader to places they are unlikely to have visited and to figures they are unlikely to know… Violet Moller brings the world to life vividly and with style.’ —Nicholas Spencer, author Magisteria

Inside the Stargazer’s Palace plunges us into an irresistible network of touchy scientists, unpredictable patrons and religious controversy in the sixteenth century, antechamber of the modern world. Violet Moller is an assured and expert guide to this world, writing with a light touch and an infectious love of her subject.’ —Christopher de Bellaigue, author of The Lion House

A fantastic introduction to 16th-century thought, revealing myriad connections between characters I only knew as stand-alone practitioners. Moller deftly places these characters into a coherent historical narrative that (in keeping with the time) does not privilege scientific knowledge above religious or astrological, but rather shows interconnectedness… This is a well-told story of knowledge production and the spread of ideas in 16th-century Europe that gives voice to more unsung figures in instrument making, writing and printing who were making waves just as their industries were starting out.’ —BBC Sky at Night

Fascinating… Moller expertly guides the reader through the significant cultural and political events of the century… the book presents an intriguing alternative view of the Scientific Revolution.’ —Physics World

About The Author

Violet Moller

Violet Moller is a critically acclaimed and award-winning historian, who has written four previous books, including The Map of Knowledge. She presents the Travels Through Time podcast, one of the Guardian’s five best podcasts for the curious-minded, and lives in Oxford.

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