@article{652631, note = {Titlepage in red and black.}, author = {Saunders, Richard, and Saunder, Richard,}, url = {http://library.usi.edu/record/652631}, title = {1710. Apollo Anglicanus: the English Apollo. Assisting all persons in the right understanding of this years revolutions, as also of things past, present, and to come. With necessary tables, plain and useful, a twofold kalendar, viz. Julian or English, and Gregorian or foreign computations, more plain and full than any other, with the rising and setting of the sun, the nighty rising and setting of the moon, and also her southing, exactly calculated for every day. Of general use for most men. Being second after bissextile, or leap year. To which is added the moon's application to the fixed stars: with the calculation of the eclipses: also tables for the measuring of timber: with many other things both pleasant, useful, and necessary. Calculated according to art, and fitted to the meridian of Leicester, whose latitude is 52 degrees, 41 minutes, exactly fitting all the middle counties of England, and without sensible error the whole kingdom. By Richard Saunder, student in the physical and mathematical sciences. [electronic resource] :}, publisher = {Printed by J. Wilde, for the Company of Stationers,}, recid = {652631}, pages = {[48]p. :}, address = {London :}, year = {1710}, }