Description
Detailed star chart of the constellations Cassiopea, Cepheus, Ursa Minor & Draco and neighboring constellations, from Fortin's Atlas Celeste de Flamsteed . . , published in Paris.
John Flamsteed was the first Astronomer Royal at the London Observatory, winning out over Edmund Halley and Isaac Newton. He made a copious and thorough study of the heavens, but refused to publish his works, despite the urgings of his colleagues, including Halley and Newton. Finally, his life's work was published posthumously in 1728, in what is now an extremely scarce to rare work.
This later French edition was a tremendous success and is perhaps the most popular French language Celestial Atlas of the 18th Century.