The text describes 47 of the 48 Ptolemaic constellations, centering primarily on the Greek and Roman mythology surrounding the constellations, though there is some discussion of the relative positions of stars.
The editio princeps of De astronomia was published in 1475 by Augustinus Carnerius.[4] Less than a decade later, in 1482, Erhard Ratdolt published an edition of De astronomia, which carried the full title Clarissimi Viri Hyginii Poeticon Astronomicon Opus Utilissimum. For this print, Ratdolt commissioned a series of woodcuts depicting the constellations to accompany Hyginus's text.[5] As with many other star atlases that would follow it, the positions of various stars are indicated overlaid on the image of each constellation. However, the relative positions of the stars in the woodcuts bear little resemblance to the descriptions given by Hyginus in the text or the actual positions of the stars in the sky.[6]
As a result of the inaccuracy of the depicted star positions and the fact that the constellations are not shown with any context, the De astronomia is not particularly useful as a guide to the night sky. However, the illustrations commissioned by Ratdolt served as a template for future sky atlas renderings of the constellation figures. The text, by contrast, is an important source, and occasionally the only source, for some of the more obscure Greek myths.
Notes
^Also known as the Poeticon Astronomicon[1] and the Astronomica.[2]
References
^E.g., the book is called "Hyginus' Poeticon Astronomicon" in Gordon (1975), p. 154.
^E.g., the book is called "Hyginus' Astronomica" in Copeland (2016), p. 82.
Condos, Theony (1997). Star Myths of the Greeks and Romans: A Sourcebook, Containing The Constellations of Pseudo-Eratosthenes and the Poetic Astronomy of Hyginus. Grand Rapids, MI: Phanes Press. ISBN1890482927.
Copeland, Rita, ed. (2016). The Oxford History of Classical Reception in English Literature. Vol. 1 (800-1558). Oxford: Oxford University Press.