The Risky Anniversary Birthday Bash Winner
Catinbody, email me at carolyn AT carolynjewel.com with your name and at least an email address so I can get you the gift card. Not sure if I need your mailing address. I might.
Regency Planets
My 1807 Brooke’s Gazeteer starts its listing of all places geographical in Michneresque fashion: with a discussion of the solar system.
Here are the Regency planets in the order listed:
- Mercury
- Venus
- Earth
- Mars
- Jupiter
- Saturn
- The Georgian
The first 6 should be pretty familiar to you and doubtless you’ve noticed the list seems to be missing one or two planets along with a bonus mystery planet. There are 8 planets, as you probably know. 9 if you can’t bear to give up Pluto.
Number 7, The Georgian, is better known to us today as Uranus. From Brook’s Gazeteer:
The Georgian, the most remote planet in our system, had escaped the observation of every astronomer, as a planet, till the 13th of March 1781, when it was ascertained to be a planet by Mr. Herschel, at Bath, who gave it the name of Georgium Sidus, as a mark of respect to his present majesty. Foreign astronomers, however, in general, call it by the name of the discoverer . . . It shines with a faint steady light, somewhat paler and fainter than Jupiter; but its apparent diameter being only about four seconds, it can only be seen by the naked eye in a clear night, when the Moon is absent. Six satellites, attending upon it, have since been discovered.
A little additional Googling about reveals that on the 13th of March, 1781 Mr. Herschel was trying out a new telescope. I bet everyone called Herschel Gadget Boy. If they didn’t they should have. This is how you justify cool toys: But honey! I know you want a new butter mold, but lookit! A planet!
201 years later, Voyager 2 flew past The Georgian (in 1982) getting closest in 1986. Think about that. In 1781 they didn’t even have the internal combustion engine. 201 years later, we’re flying spacecraft. Holy heck.
Basically, everyone seemed to recognize that Georgium Sidus was a lame name for a planet and folks all over the place put forth various other names, some of them equally lame– Neptune Great Britain? Really? –but finally in 1850, the suggestion of Uranus stuck, leading, as we all know, to any number of schoolyard jokes about that name.
Perhaps the original name is not so surprising once you know that George III then gave Herschel a L200 per year stipend provided he move to Windsor and let the Royal family look through his telescope. You can read more about this at the Wikipedia article on Uranus minus my patented way with words of course.
What about Neptune? According to Wikipedia:
Neptune was mathematically predicted before it was directly observed. With a prediction by Urbain Le Verrier, telescopic observations confirming the existence of a major planet were made on the night of September 23, 1846, and into the early morning of the 24th, at the Berlin Observatory, by astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle (assisted by Heinrich Louis d’Arrest), working from Le Verrier’s calculations. It was a sensational moment of 19th century science and dramatic confirmation of Newtonian gravitational theory. In François Arago’s apt phrase, Le Verrier had discovered a planet “with the point of his pen.”
(My emphasis of the date)
Others had observed the wiggle in The Georgian’s orbit, but it took a while for someone to posit that the wiggle was caused by another planet. Score one for Newton and the scientific method. The Wikepedia article on Neptune and the section on all the people, going back to Gallileo, who may have observed it, but not realized it was a planet is fascinating reading. I highly recommend reading the Wikipedia entry.
Pluto, you ask? Well, Pluto isn’t a planet. Sorry.
Therefore, during the Regency, be careful of what planets people might discuss, how many they think there are and also what they called them. Not to mention what country they’re in or from when they’re showing off by naming the planets. Note that my Brook’s Gazeteer listed the Uranus as The Georgian and only in the description did it give the name Georgium Sidus.
Do you have a favorite planet? If so, which one? Where do you fall on the Pluto demotion?
Ah, one of my favorite subjects… 🙂 Not that long ago I read a book, The Georgian Star, which was an overview of Herschel and sis Caroline…
Also too, the hubbub about Pluto isn’t new — back around then, they started discovering the asteroids. Today, we know them as such — but back then, oh, what the devil were they. Some people, and probably lists too, had a lot more stuff in the solar system classified as planets. So the idea of “what the devil is a planet”, is most certainly not new.
Pluto, for me — I get why they did it and all… and my eventual goal is to go into planetary science, so I guess fundamentally I get the reasoning… but I can still personally hate that they demoted Pluto. So sue me. LOLOL
And my favorite planet… well, if you knew me, which you don’t, you wouldn’t have to ask, but since you don’t know me… since I was 5 (and that will be 30 years ago this December), I wanted to go to Mars. Still know where I want my condo there. And now I know I can have indoor plumbing with the liquid water they think they found! 🙂
Lois
Pluto will always be a planet to me. And I have to say it’s been a fav ever since I read THE FOREVER WAR, in which they train on its icy surface. Plus, there’s that giant dog connection, LOL!
Congratulations to Catinbody on her win!
I haven’t really thought about a favorite planet before but I would have to say Jupiter
My fav planet is Saturn. Because of all the awesome moons. I know you were all wondering that.
I too feel sad about the demotion of Pluto, by the way.
I grew up with Pluto as a planet and I fully intend to stick my spoon in the wall with Pluto as a planet no matter what those scientific know-it-alls say!
My favorite planet? Mercury! I love a planet that can take the heat!
Don’t know that it is really a favorite, but Jupiter has so much to offer for observation.
As for poor Pluto, they should have left it alone. It has been considered a planet for such a long time, there wasn’t really a need to demote it.
Congratulations, on your win, catinbody.