Known to have existed in Classical times & still being made for a mass market, globes represent the oldest continuous technique for picturing the Earth & heavens. Originally aids to philosophy, the Renaissance saw their development as compendia of rapidly expanding geographical & astronomical knowledge, & as instruments of navigation & cosmography. They have been produced as simple spheres & as sophisticated mechanical devices, as toys & as high -status furniture; used as classroom & other demonstrational tools & as a symbol in the art of many periods. Until the onset of modern industrial techniques, their manufacture as plaster, wood or metal spheres was complex & laborious, & the skills required for their graphic construction & publication no less so. The National Maritime Museum at Greenwich has one of the world's largest & finest collections of globes, comprising over 300 items including terrestrial & celestial examples, armillary spheres & planispheres. Many of these themselves derive from earlier holdings, such as the Barberini, Landau, & Gabb collections, which were acquired en bloc for the Museum in its formative years through the activities of its principal benefactor, Sir James Caird (1864-1954). The Greenwich collection has now been fully catalogued by one of the leading authorities on Western globes, Dr Elly Dekker, who undertook the task from 1993 to 1995 as the Museum's first Sackler Fellow in the History of Astronomy & Navigational Sciences. The catalogue
Includes:: full entries on all items in the Museum's collection, the overwhelming majority being illustrated. There are also nine introductory essays by Dr Dekker & other NMM specialists, & an integrated section on the Museum's Islamic globes, introduced & catalogued by Dr Silke Ackermann of the British Museum.