Custos Messium

From All Skies Encyclopaedia

This constellation was invented in Early Modern Time .

Etymology and History

Origin of Constellation

Custos Messium as Vineyard Keeper in Young (1807). A Course of Lectures on Natural Philosophy and the Mechanical Arts.

Ian Ridpath writes:[1]

This far-northern constellation was introduced by the French astronomer Joseph Jérôme de Lalande (1732–1807) on his celestial globe of 1775, and was described by him in an accompanying pamphlet titled Explication des nouveaux globes céleste et terrestre (see this review from the Journal des Sçavans of 1776 November). The name Custos Messium is a punning reference to his countryman Charles Messier, the famed comet hunter, and in fact the constellation was often known simply as Messier, particularly in France. Its brightest star was the present-day 50 Cassiopeiae, of 4th magnitude.

(...)

Lalande chose this previously anonymous area of sky because it was here that the comet of 1774 (now known as C/1774 P1) was first seen. The comet was extensively observed by Messier but, ironically, was not discovered by him – the discoverer in this case was actually another Frenchman, Jacques Laibats-Montaigne (1716–88).

The British scientist Thomas Young (1773–1829) renamed the figure the Vineyard Keeper on his chart of the northern hemisphere sky published in 1807 in A Course of Lectures on Natural Philosophy and the Mechanical Arts, but even this was not enough to broaden its appeal and it withered into obscurity.

Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation

Mythology

no mythology.

Weblinks

References

  1. Ian Ridpath, Star Tales (online edition) on Custos Messium.