Durham University Library
Variant namesThomas Wright was born at Byers Green, Co. Durham. In 1730, at the age of 20, he set up his own school in Sunderland, where he taught mathematics and navigation, and sold mathematical instruments. Through the good offices of the Earl of Scarbrough, his instrument the pannauticon was approved by the Lords of the Admiralty, and the central period of his career was spent in London and in the country houses of aristocratic patrons. A polymath, Wright achieved distinction not only as a mathematician, astronomer and instrument maker, but also as an architect and garden designer, and antiquary. In his best known and most influential work, An original theory or new hypothesis of the universe (London, 1750), Wright explained the appearance of the Milky Way as an optical effect due to our immersion in what locally approximates to a flat layer of stars, an idea which was taken up, transformed and greatly elaborated by Immanuel Kant, after reading an abstract of Wright's work in a Hamburg periodical. Largely self-taught, Wright never quite succeeded in breaking into the scientific establishment, but his career illustrates how an able man with scientific interests could make his way by lecturing, teaching the children of his patrons, and furthering their architectural and gardening projects. In retirement he returned to Byers Green to prosecute his studies, and built a small observatory tower at Westerton nearby.
From the guide to the Thomas Wrightiana, 20th century (including facsimiles of 18th and 19th century material), (Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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referencedIn | Durham University Records: Support Services, 1837-2007 | Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections | |
creatorOf | Durham University Library. Durham University Library Cod. V. II. 14 [microform]. | University of Rochester | |
creatorOf | Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400. The double sorrow of Troilus to tell [microform]. | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | |
creatorOf | Thomas Wrightiana, 20th century (including facsimiles of 18th and 19th century material) | Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections | |
creatorOf | Durham University Library. [Fragment of polyphony] | Biblioteca Berenson, Villa I Tatti - The Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies |
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Filters:
Relation | Name | |
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associatedWith | Burgh, Benedict. | person |
associatedWith | Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400. | person |
associatedWith | Created by the support services of Durham University, especially its library | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Hill Monastic Manuscript Project. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Lydgate, John, 1370?-1451? | person |
associatedWith | Paneth, Fritz, 1887-1958 | person |
associatedWith | Wright, Thomas, 1711-1786 | person |
Place Name | Admin Code | Country | |
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Westerton (Durham, England) | |||
Byers Green (England) | |||
England--Durham |
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Astronomy |
Christian saints |
Cosmology |
Landscape architecture |
Landscape gardening |
Manuscripts, English (Middle) |
Music |
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Corporate Body
Britons
English,
English, Middle (1100-1500),
Latin