EDMUND HALLEY
1656 - 1742
Edmund Halley, born in London in 1656, and died at Greenwich
in 1742, was educated at St. Paul's School, London, and Queen's
College, Oxford, in 1703 succeeded Wallis as Savilian professor,
and subsequently in 1720 was appointed astronomer-royal in succession
to Flamsteed, whose Historia Coelestis Britannica he
edited; the first and imperfect edition was issued in 1712. Halley's
name will be recollected for the generous manner in which he secured
the immediate publication of Newton's Principia in
1687. Most of his original work was on astronomy and allied
subjects, and lies outside the limits of this book; it may be,
however, said that the work is of excellent quality, and both
Lalande and Mairan speak of it in the highest terms. Halley
conjecturally restored the eighth and lost book of the conics of
Apollonius, and in 1710 brought out a magnificent edition of the
whole work; he also edited the works of Serenus, those of Menelaus, and
some of the minor works of Apollonius. He was in his turn succeeded at
Greenwich as astronomer-royal by Bradley.