Aristotle
(384 - 322 BC)
Aristotle

Ancient and pre-Renaissance
Contributors to Meteorology
(through 1300s AD)


Below are checklists of Ancient and pre-Renaissance Contributors to Meteorology on postal items (stamps, souvenir sheets, aerogrammes, postal cards, etc.) and numismatic items (banknotes and coins). Catalog numbers, years of issue, and notes on the items featured are given when available. If readers know of additional information or images, please contact the authors using the e-mail addresses at the bottom of this page.

See also The School of Athens (painting by Raphael, ~1511) for additional items associated with selected names, those marked with SoA in parentheses after their names.

Contributors to Meteorology Time Period Covered Number
Ancient and pre-Renaissance (this page) Through 1300s AD 34
Precursor Era Renaissance [~1400 AD] through World War I 229
Modern Era Post World War I 143
Chronological and Alphabetical Indexes 406


Ancient and Pre-Renaissance Contributors to meteorology covered:


The Contributors on this page are listed in alphabetical order above and are presented in chronological order below.


Noah

Noah
(2928? - 1979? BC)

Ark

Noah is the earliest historical character who can be linked in some way to meteorology. He obeyed God's command to build the Ark in order to save himself and his family and many animals from a devastating flood. In modern terms, he received a weather forecast, believed it and acted upon that information. Then after the flood, God promised Noah that never again would there be such a flood, and a rainbow appeared as a sign of that promise.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
This list is an incomplete sample of the numerous postal items that contain this person.
Ajman Mi2196A
Mi2196B
From block of 6 (Mi2194-2199)
Imperforate
1972 Noah sending out a dove
Ajman Mi2199A
Mi2199B
God's covenant with Noah
Armenia 458 (BL?) SS1 1993 "Noah's descent from Mt. Ararat"
Azerbaijan 930 (Mi?) 2010 Noah's Mausoleum in Nakhchivan (traditional gravesite of Noah)
Australia 1222-1223 fdc (Mi? fdc) (Black rubber-stamp) cachet on FDC, also insert 1991 Noah's Ark
Barbuda Unknown (Mi?) 1978 Detail from Déluge (The Flood) by Michelangelo (fresco in Sistine Chapel); Noah's Ark is in the original, but is not visible in this partial reproduction
Batumi Local_ss Local post SS1 1997 Noah's Ark
Benin 690G (Mi515) Dahomey C161 surcharged 1992 Noah sending out a dove
Central African Republic Unknown (Mi?) SS1 2014
Central African Republic Unknown fdc SS1 and cachet on FDC
China (People's Republic) 2032 fdc (Mi? fdc) Cachet on FDC 1986 "The Dove brought an olive branch to Noah signifying flood waters had subsided"
China (People's Republic) None Postal card back 2002 "When all the polar ice melts, will we be able to build a Noah's Ark for the new era?" (text translation)
Dahomey C159 fdc (Mi480 fdc) (Pictorial) cancel on FDC 1972 Noah sending out a dove
Dahomey C160 fdc (Mi481 fdc) (Pictorial) cancel on FDC
Dahomey C161 (Mi482)
iC161

Imperforate
Dahomey C161 fdc Stamp and cancel and cachet on FDC
France 889 maxi (Mi? maxi) (Multi-color printed) cachet on maxicard 1958 Noah and the dove
France 2648 (Mi?)
2648+label

Stamp and label, from strip of 6 (2653a (2648-2653 + label))
1998 Noah's dove
France 2648 maxi Maxicard
France 2648+label fdc1 Stamp and label on FDC
France 2648+label fdc2 Stamp and label and cachet on FDC
France 2648+label fdc3 Stamp and label and cachet (different) on FDC
France 2648-2650 ds Engraving deluxe sheet strip of 3 (2648-2650)
France 2654 (Mi?) Serpentine die cut
France 2659a (Mi?) Booklet pane of 12 (2x (2654-2659)), from booklet (2659b)
France None New Year's card with reproduction of 2648 1999 Noah's dove
France None (Text) cancel 2008 Noé (Noah) (post office)
France 3969 (Mi?) 2011 (symbolic) Noah's Ark
Great Britain None (Hand-drawn) cachet on cover 1933 Noah's Ark
Great Britain None (Pictorial) cancel on cover 2002 Noah's Ark
Grenada 1145 (Mi?) 1983 Noah and His Sons Building the Ark, painting by Raphael
Grenada 1468 (Mi?) 1986 Noah and the Rainbow, painting by Marc Chagall
Grenada 1465-1468 fdc One of four stamps on FDC
Grenada 1478 (Mi?) Noah's Ark, painting by Marc Chagall
Grenada 3876 (bl?) On stamp of SS1 2013 detail from Michelangelo's painting The Sacrifice of Noah
Grenada Carriacou 2513 (Mi?) 2003 The Building of Noah's Ark by Guido Reni
Grenada Carriacou Unknown c (Mi?) From MS4 (a-d) 2014 Michelangelo's painting The Sacrifice of Noah
Grenada Carriacou Unknown d (Mi?) Detail from Déluge (The Flood) by Michelangelo (fresco in Sistine Chapel); part of Noah's Ark is at the extreme right of the stamp
Guyana Unknown ss (BL?) SS1 (silver) 1994 Noah's Ark animals
Guyana Unknown ss (BL?) SS1 (gold)
Israel None Postcard 1930s Noah's Ark on Mt. Ararat
Israel None Postcard 1958 Noah's flood from Raphael
Israel None Postcard (different) 1958 Noah and family
Israel None Postcard (different) 1958 Noah's altar
Israel 394+tab (Mi449+tab) 1969 Noah's Ark
Israel 395+tab (Mi450+tab)
Israel 396+tab (Mi451+tab)
Israel 397+tab (Mi452+tab)
Israel 398+tab (Mi453+tab) Stamp and tab
Israel 394-396+tabs fdc Three stamps and tabs and cachet on FDC
Israel 397-398+tabs fdc Two stamps and tabs and cachet (different) on FDC
Israel None Postal card (large printed stamp) 1990 Noah
Israel 1125-1128 folder (Mi1240-1243 folder) Folder 1992 "Noah's Ark" (in text on cover)
Israel 1712 (BL77) MS6 (1712 (a-f)) (Mi1948-1953) 2007 Noah's Ark
Israel 1712 booklet Booklet (of ? stamps)
Israel 1712 essay Essay (smaller face value)
Israel 1712 fdc MS6 and (pictorial) cancel and cachet on FDC
Israel 1712a-c fdc Three of MS6 and (pictorial) cancel on FDC
Israel 1712 booklet Exhibition booklet, also back 2008 Noah's Ark
Israel 1712_sa p00 (Mi1994-1999) Prestige booklet with serpentine-cut self-adhesive stamps (2x (1712a-f)), front (p.00) 2008 Noah's Ark
Israel 1712_sa p01 Prestige booklet, p.01, with 1712b_sa (Mi1995)
Israel 1712_sa p02 Prestige booklet, p.02
Israel 1712_sa p03 Prestige booklet, p.03, with 1712c_sa (Mi1996)
Israel 1712_sa p04 Prestige booklet, p.04
Israel 1712_sa p05 Prestige booklet, p.05
Israel 1712_sa p06 Prestige booklet, p.06
Israel 1712_sa p07 Prestige booklet, p.07, with 1712f_sa (Mi1999)
Israel 1712_sa p08 Prestige booklet, p.08
Israel 1712_sa p09 Prestige booklet, p.09, with 1712d_sa (Mi1997)
Israel 1712_sa p10 Prestige booklet, p.10
Israel 1712_sa p11 Prestige booklet, p.11
Israel 1712_sa p12 Prestige booklet, p.12
Israel 1712_sa p13 Prestige booklet, p.13
Israel 1712_sa p14 Prestige booklet, p.14
Israel 1712_sa p15 Prestige booklet, p.15, with 1712e_sa (Mi1998)
Israel 1712_sa p16 Prestige booklet, p.16
Israel 1712_sa p17 Prestige booklet, p.17, with 1712a_sa (Mi1994)
Israel 1712_sa p18 Prestige booklet, p.18
Israel 1712_sa p19 Prestige booklet, p.19, with 1712a-f_sa (Mi1994-1999)
Israel 1712_sa p20 Prestige booklet, p.20, with reproduction of 1712a-f_sa (Mi1994-1999)
Israel 1712_sa p21 Prestige booklet, p.21
Israel 1712a-f+1712a-f_sa cover (Mi1948-1953+Mi1994-1999 cover) Six perforated and six serpentine-cut self-adhesive stamps and cachet on (World Stamp Championship) cover 2008 Noah's Ark
Israel 1712a-f_sa cover (Mi1994-1999 fdc) Serpentine-cut self-adhesive MS6 (from prestige booklet) and cachet (different) on (World Stamp Championship) cover
Italy 1182 maxi (Mi? maxi) Maxicard 1975 Detail from Déluge (The Flood) by Michelangelo (fresco in Sistine Chapel); Noah's Ark is in the original, but is not visible in the partial reproductions shown in the stamp and the maxicard image
Liberia 1319 (BL?) MS25 (1319 (a-y)) 1998 Noah's Ark
Liberia 1320 (BL?) SS1
Liberia 2382 (BL?) MS4 (2382 (a-d)) 2006 Noah's Ark
Netherlands None (Red pictorial) meter 1965 Noah's Ark
Nicaragua 894 (Mi?) 1971 Reproduction of The Drunkenness of Noah by Michelangelo
Palau 396c (Mi?) One of MS30 (396 (a-ad)) 1996 Noah and wife
Palau KM465 $2. (silver coin) reverse, also obverse 2015 Noah's Ark
St. Vincent 1152 (Mi1167-1191) MS25 (1152 (a-y)) 1989 Noah's Ark
Sweden None Postal card 1973 Noah's Ark
Sweden 955 card (Mi? card) Card 1981 Noah's Ark (in drawing on card)
Sweden 1691 (Mi1492) 1988 1000th anniv. city of Skara; some Noah's Ark animals, from one of the stained glass windows in Skara's cathedral (the windows, by Bo Beskow, illustrate various biblical events)
Trinidad and Tobago 185 (Mi269) 1970 Noah's Ark
Tonga 650a (Mi?)
i650a
One of MS12 (650 (a-l))
One of imperforate MS12 (i650 (a-l))
1987 Noah's Ark, Noah (in upper margin text)
Tonga 650a specimen One of MS12 (650 specimen (a-l))
Tonga 650a proof Monochrome proof (black)
Tuva Unknown (Mi?) 1995 Noah's Ark
United States None (Red pictorial) meter on cover 1986 Noah's Ark
Vatican City 548 (Mi633) 1974 Noah's Ark
Vatican City 548-549 fdc1 One of two stamps and cachet on FDC
Vatican City 548-549 fdc2 One of two stamps on FDC
Vatican City 551 (Mi636) 1974 Noah's Ark
Vatican City 550+552-553 fdc (Roma) cachet on FDC
Vatican City 551+554 fdc One of two stamps on FDC (Roma cachet)
Vatican City 951 (Mi1114) One of strip of 2 (951a (950-951)) (Mi1113-1114) 1994 Detail from Déluge (The Flood) by Michelangelo (fresco in Sistine Chapel), which includes Noah's Ark (951a reproduces the entire fresco)


Yu

Yu, Da
(King Da Yu)
(~2000 BC)

Da Yu was a famous king of China who became popular with his people because he had some success in his project to control the floods of the Yellow River. The Great Flood of around 2000 BC has remained part of Chinese mythology, and recent geological work has found physical traces that it may have left behind. This article discusses Yu, the Great Flood and the scientific evidence that it is more than just a myth.

Large floods have continued to take place on the Yellow and other Chinese rivers through to modern times, due to occasional long periods of heavy rains. Da Yu was the first known person to attempt to mitigate the disastrous effects of such weather situations.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
China (People's Republic) None Postal card 2002 Shangyu City, flood control (in Chinese text); statue probably of Da Yu, to mark his flood control achievements (also, Da Yu died in Zhejiang Province, which is where Shangyu City is located)
China (People's Republic) 2353 cover (Mi? cover) (Red pictorial) cancel on cover 2003 Da Yu (in text and in silhouette); also probably at the right of the pictorial cancel the flood monument in Harbin commemorating the devastating flood of 1958


Hesiod

Hesiod
(8th century BC)

Hesiod was a Greek writer whose poem Works and Days was a sort of farmers' almanac in verse form. In it, he associated astronomical events with certain weather events. For example, he said that "when the Pleiades plunge into the misty sea to escape Orion's rude strength, then truly gales of all kinds rage" (this occurs at the end of October or the beginning of November), and that "fifty days after the solstice...the season of wearisome heat is come to an end". Such observations could be considered one of the earliest forms of climatological study. Works and Days is at the beginning of a tradition of Greek and Roman works, often in the form of calendars, that related astronomical phenomena to the weather.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Greece P107 50 drachmai (banknote), also back 1939
Greece P168 50 drachmai (banknote), also back 1941


Thales

Thales of Miletus
(624? - 546? BC)

Thales of Miletus was one of the seven Sages of ancient Greece, and the first of the Greek philosophers. He is considered the founder of Greek (and therefore European) philosophy and science, and made a number of discoveries in geometry, astronomy and physics. He believed that water is the first principle of everything and that the world rests on water. He considered a hydrologic cycle in which surface and below-ground water circulated up and down through the soil. He seems not to have considered the atmospheric component of the hydrologic cycle, but Anaximander, one of his young associates, put forth the idea that evaporation from the seas was the source of moisture that fell as rain. Unfortunately, none of Thales' texts have survived, but they are known through commentaries from a number of sources, including Apollodorus, Suidas, Callimachus, Herodotus, Plato and Aristotle.

One anecdote about Thales relates to his response to detractors who claimed that his wisdom was of little practical use. Using his knowledge of meteorology to forecast a bumper crop of olives, he cornered the market for olive presses, charged exorbitant rates for their rental, and, having become wealthy in less than a year, then sold the presses and continued with his life as a philosopher.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Greece 1784 (Mi1849) One of pair (1785a (1784-1785)), or 8 of MS16 (1785f (8x (1784-1785))) 1994
Greece 1784a (Mi?) One of vertical-perf pair (1785d (1784a+1785b) from booklet pane of 4 (1785c (2x (1784a+1785b))) with booklet outside (1785e) (front and back)
Greece 2799 (Mi?) 2017
Greece 2794+2796+2798-2799 fdc One of four stamps on FDC


Anaximander

Anaximander
(610 - 546 BC)

??

Anaximander is included in Raphael's painting The School of Athens. The special School of Athens web page identifies Anaximander in the painting, includes all philatelic items that feature it in full or in part, and identifies the Ancient Contributors found in those items, which are not duplicated in this page unless they also include a reference to Anaximander from a different source.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
(See also The School of Athens (painting by Raphael) for additional items)
??


Heraclitus

Heraclitus
(535? - 475? BC)

Heraclitus was a Greek philosopher who emphasized the idea of the conflict of opposites, such as day and night, hot and cold, winter and summer, and life and death. When sick with the dropsy, he went to town and asked the doctors in a riddle if they could make a drought out of his rainy weather (here again, the play of opposites, in a meteorological sense). In addition, Heraclitus said that "everything flows" (panta rhei) ... wind, water, life. These things are similar in that they are all dynamic. Who knows, perhaps his observations of the weather gave him this idea. Just as the winds and the waters are ever-changing, ever-flowing, so is life.

Heraclitus is included in Raphael's painting The School of Athens. The special School of Athens web page identifies Heraclitus in the painting, includes all philatelic items that feature it in full or in part, and identifies the Ancient Contributors found in those items, which are not duplicated in this page unless they also include a reference to Heraclitus from a different source.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
(See also The School of Athens (painting by Raphael) for additional items)
Romania 1442 (Mi2003) 1961
Romania 1442+1445+1447 fdc One of three stamps and cachet on FDC
Romania 1443-1444+1446 fdc Cachet on FDC
Romania None Printed stamp and cachet on postal card (blue) 1961
Romania None Printed stamp and cachet on postal card (red) 1961
St. Vincent 2862a (Mi5126) From MS4 (2862 (a-d)) (Mi5126-5129) 2001 Heraclitus, the mournful philosopher
St. Vincent 2862b (Mi5127)


Democritus

Democritus of Abdera
(460? - 370? BC)

Democritus of Abdera was a Greek natural philosopher who did studies of various natural phenomena, for which he became well-known. He was a student of Leucippus and co-originator of the theory that all matter is composed of indivisible and imperishable elements which he called atoma ("indivisible units"), from which we get the word "atom".

There is some evidence that Democritus predicted changes in the weather, and that he used this ability to convince people that he could predict other future events.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Greece P190 20 drachmai (banknote) 1955
Greece 716 (Mi773) 1961 Democritus Nuclear Research Centre
Greece 717 (Mi774)
Greece 716-717 fdc Two stamps and cancel on FDC (As above for stamps)
Greece P196 100 drachmai (banknote) 1967 Democritus Nuclear Research Centre
Greece KM132 10 drachmai (copper-nickel coin) 1982
Greece 1469 (Mi1528) 1983 International Democritus Congress
St. Thomas and Prince Islands 693a (Mi821) In (lower-left and lower-right) margin of MS5 (5x 694 + label) + 2x 2 different margin depictions 1983 Mirror image of part of Democritus of Abdera, painting by Rubens


Hippocrates

Hippocrates
(460? - 377? BC)

Hippocrates was a Greek natural philosopher who is considered to be the "Father of Medicine". His treatise Airs, Waters and Places is the earliest known work to include a discussion of weather. In it, he wrote that:

"Whoever wishes to investigate medicine properly should proceed by first considering the seasons of the year and what effects each of them produces, for they are not all alike, but differ much among themselves as regards their influence. Next, one should study the winds, the heat and cold, especially values which are common to all countries, and then those which are peculiar to each locality. Similarly, when someone arrives in a city to which he is a stranger, he ought to consider its situation as regards the prevailing winds and the rising of the Sun; for its influence is not the same if it faces north or south, or if it faces the rising or the setting Sun".

More generally, Hippocrates wrote about common diseases that occur in particular locations, seasons, winds and air. Galen, Maimonides and the medieval Islamic scholars al Razi and Avicenna continued this tradition.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Australia 441 (Mi?) 1968
Belize 542 (Mi?) 1981 Project Hippocrates1
Belize 538-544 fdc One of seven stamps on FDC
Belize 545a (Mi?) One of MS2 (545 (a-b))
Belize 567 (Mi?) 542 overprinted in gold "Independence 21 Sep 1981" 1981 Project Hippocrates1
Belize 563-565+567 fdc One of four stamps on FDC
Belize 570 (Mi?) On one of MS2 (570 (a-b)), 545 overprinted in gold "Independence 21 Sep 1981"
Belize 590 (Mi?) One of MS2 (590 (a-b)), 545 surcharged $1 with Espamer 1981 overprint 1981 Project Hippocrates1
Belize 590 fdc MS2 on FDC
Central African Republic Unknown ss (BL?) SS1 2012 "Hippocrates" and Hippocratic Oath (in ss1 margin and also in fdc cachet)
Central African Republic Unknown fdc SS1 and cachet on FDC
Equatorial Guinea Unlisted (Mi unlisted) ?
France 2112 (Mi2670) 1988 House of the Heads (Valence, France) with busts representing Winds, Fortune, Time, Law and Medicine. Hippocrates (Medicine) is possibly at the right
Germany None Cinderella (poster stamp) ?
Greece 514 (Mi?) 1947
Greece 521 (Mi?) 1950
Greece 528 (Mi557) 1950
Greece 529 (Mi558)
Greece 657 (Mi?) 1959 plane tree of Hippocrates
Greece 1326 (Mi?) 1979
Greece 1326+2x1200 cover (Mi? cover) One of three stamps and cancel and cachet on cover 1979
Greece 1841 (Mi?) 1996
Greece 2295 (BL?) MS10 + 10 labels, from deluxe folder with text (pages 1, 2, 3, and 4) 2007
Hungary 3060 (Mi?) 1987
Hungary 3060 fdc Stamp and cachet on FDC
India None (Bagalkot Philatelic Club) cachet on cover 1978 "Hippocrates"
Iran 1226 (Mi?) 1962 Hippocrates (at left)
Iran 1227 (Mi?)
Iran 1226-1227 fdc Two stamps and cancel and cachet on FDC
Iran 1773 (Mi?) 1974 Hippocrates (left image of two in upper-right of stamp)
Italy None Phone card ?
Lebanon None (5p) Revenue stamp 1961 Hippocrates (at left)
Lebanon None (10p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (5p) Revenue stamp 1965 Hippocrates (at left)
Lebanon None (10p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (5p) Revenue stamp 1967 Hippocrates (at left)
Lebanon None (10p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (25p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (5p) Revenue stamp 1973 Hippocrates (at left)
Lebanon None (10p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (25p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (5PL) Revenue stamp ~1980s Hippocrates (at left)
Lebanon None (1000L) Revenue stamp ~1992 Hippocrates (at left)
Lebanon None (500L) Revenue stamp 1992 Hippocrates (at left)
Lebanon None (5L) Revenue stamp 199? Hippocrates (at left)
Lebanon None (250LL on 5L) Revenue stamp 1994 Hippocrates (at left)
Lebanon None (250LL) Revenue stamp 2006 Hippocrates (at left)
Romania None (Blue and black printed) cachet on cover 1981
Romania None (Red-brown printed) cachet on cover 1981
Romania None (Pictorial) cancel on postcard 2010 (~1550th anniv. birth)
Romania None (Multi-color printed) cachet on postcard 2010 (~1550th anniv. birth)
San Marino 1029 (Mi?) 1982 "Hippocrate"
San Marino 1029 maxi Maxicard
San Marino 1022-1023+1027+1029 fdc One of four stamps and cachet on FDC
Syria C340 (Mi904) 1965 Hippocrates (at left)
Transkei (South Africa) 97 (Mi?) 1982
Transkei (South Africa) 97-100 fdc One of four stamps and cachet on FDC Hippocrates' oath
Uganda 564 (Mi?) 1987
United States None (Black printed) cachet on stamped envelope 1919 (~1460th anniv. birth)
United States 949 fdc1 (Mi? fdc1) (Smartcraft) cachet on FDC (3-line cancel) 1947 "Hippocrates Oath"
United States 949 fdc2 (Mi? fdc2) (Smartcraft) cachet on FDC (4-line cancel)
Yemen Arab Republic 6676 (Mi530A)
i6676 (Mi530B)

Imperforate
1966
Yemen Arab Republic 6679 (Mi533A)
i6679 (Mi533B)

Imperforate

1Project Hippocrates (HIghly PerfOrming Computer for Robot-AssisTEd Surgery) is a project of the Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science and the Shadyside Medical Center, to "develop advanced planning, simulation and execution technologies for the next generation of computer-assisted surgical robots".


Eudoxus

Eudoxus
(408? - 355? BC)

Eudoxus was a Greek natural philosopher who wrote books and lectured on theology, astronomy and meteorology.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Liberia 654 (Mi897A)
i654 (Mi897B)

Imperforate
1973 "Eudoxus" (but Copernicus' portrait)


Aristotle

Aristotle
(384 - 322 BC)

In about 340 BC the Greek philosopher Aristotle wrote Meteorologica, a treatise on natural philosophy. This work represented the sum of knowledge of the time about natural science, including weather and climate (despite the title it also touched on astronomy, geology and geography). At that time, anything that fell from the sky (including rain and snow) and anything in the sky (including clouds) was called a meteor, from the Greek word meteoros, meaning 'high in the sky'. From meteoros comes our term meteorology.

In Meteorologica, Aristotle considered four "contraries" (hot, cold, moist and dry) and four "elements" (fire, air, water and earth) and used them to explain weather phenomena such as winds, clouds, rain, snow, hail, dew, lightning, halos and rainbows. In particular, he named and characterized 10 winds, based on their directions (Timosthenes of Rhodes would later add two more winds to make the complete set of 12, which were then depicted on the Tower of the Winds in Athens). Aristotle was unaware of the scientific method in which experiments would be conducted to prove or disprove his conclusions. We now know that his explanations were generally incorrect. Meteorologica, to modern eyes, is a work of intuitive natural philosophy rather than science. Nevertheless, it is important as the first known work that attempts to treat comprehensively a wide variety of meteorological topics.

Several years after the writing of Meteorologica, Theophrastus, a pupil of Aristotle, compiled a book on weather forecasting called The Book of Signs. This book presented ways to foretell the weather through various weather-related indicators, such as a ring around the Moon (which is often followed by rain). The work of Aristotle, buttressed by that of Theophrastus, had such authority that it remained the dominant influence in the study of weather and weather forecasting for nearly 2000 years.

Aristotle is included in Raphael's painting The School of Athens. The special School of Athens web page identifies Aristotle in the painting, includes all philatelic items that feature it in full or in part, and identifies the Ancient Contributors found in those items, which are not duplicated in this page unless they also include a reference to Aristotle from a different source.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
(See also The School of Athens (painting by Raphael) for additional items)
Antigua and Barbuda 2385 (Mi3233-3249) In (left) margin of MS17 (2385 (a-q + label)) 2000 "1274: Thomas Aquinas (Naples, 1225), the greatest of the Scholastics, [was] influenced by Albertus Magnus; and Maimonides enlightens European theology with Aristotle's ideas"
Barbuda Unknown (Mi unlisted) In (left) margin of MS17 (a-q + label), Antigua and Barbuda 2385 overprinted 2000 "1274: Thomas Aquinas (Naples, 1225), the greatest of the Scholastics, [was] influenced by Albertus Magnus; and Maimonides enlightens European theology with Aristotle's ideas"
Belgium B119 (Mi338) 1932 bust of Aristotle (at left) and Cardinal Mercier
Belgium B121 (Mi340)
Bosnia and Herzegovina (Croat Admin.) 343 (Mi445) 2016
Chad Unknown fdc (Mi none fdc) (Multi-color printed) cachet on FDC 2009 bust of Aristotle; (also, one stamp depicts Aristotle in a detail image from The School of Athens painting)
Chad Unknown a (Mi?)
Unknown ia
One of MS4 (a-d)
One of imperforate MS4 (a-d)
2009
Chad Unknown iss (BL?) Imperforate SS1
Chad Unknown fdc One of four stamps and (multi-color printed) cachet on FDC
Chad Unknown ms fdc
Unknown ims fdc
MS4 on FDC
Imperforate MS4 on FDC
Chad Unknown ss (BL?)
Unknown iss
SS1
Imperforate SS1
2014 "Aristotle"
Chad Unknown (BL?) Stamp from SS1 2015 "Aristote"; (also, the surrounding margin of the SS1 depicts Aristotle in a partial reproduction of The School of Athens painting)
China (People's Republic) None Postal card back1, also front 2010?
China (People's Republic) None Postal card back1 (different), also front 2010?
Congo (Republic) 961b (BL89)
i961b
In (right) margin of SS1 (961)
In (right) margin of imperforate SS1 (i961)
1992 (Project) "Aristoteles sciences de la Terre"
Cyprus 505 (Mi493) 1978 (2300th anniv. death)
Cyprus 504-507 fdc One of four stamps on FDC
France 2112 (Mi2670) 1988 House of the Heads (Valence, France) with busts representing Winds, Fortune, Time, Law and Medicine. Aristotle (Winds) is possibly at the left
Germany (West) 1328 fdc (Mi1049 fdc) (Fleetwood) back of FDC, also front 1980 "Aristotle" (in text only)
Gibraltar 1198 (Mi1333) From 1198a (8x 1198)) 2009
Gibraltar 1198-1201 fdc One of four stamps on FDC
Greece (Kingdom) P308 1 drachma (banknote) 1917
Greece (Greek State) P317 1 drachma (banknote), also back 1941
Greece P174 10,000 drachmai (banknote) 1945
Greece P175 10,000 drachmai (banknote) 1946
Greece P182 10,000 drachmai (banknote) 1947
Greece P186 10 drachmai (banknote) 1954
Greece RA91 (Mi91) 1956
Greece 1257 (Mi1316) 1978 (2300th anniv. death)
Greece 1259 (Mi1318)
Greece 1260 (Mi1319)
Greece 1257-1260 fdc Three of four stamps and (text) cancel and (Greek Post) cachet on FDC
Greece None (Pictorial) cancel on WMD cover 1981
Greece None (Pictorial) cancel on WMD cover 1981
Greece 1742 (Mi1806) 1992
Greece 2740 (Mi2894) 2016 2400th anniv. birth
Greece 2740 fdc Stamp and (pictorial) cancel and (Greek Post) cachet on FDC, also back
Greece 2740a (BL103) SS1
Greece 2740 fdc SS1 aand (pictorial) cancel nd (Greek Post) cachet on FDC
Greece 2741 (Mi2895)
Greece 2741 fdc Stamp and (pictorial) cancel and (Greek Post) cachet on FDC
Greece 2741a (BL104) SS1
Greece 2741a fdc SS1 and (pictorial) cancel and (Greek Post) cachet on FDC
Greece 2742 (Mi2896)
Greece 2742a (BL105) SS1
Greece 2742a fdc SS1 and (pictorial) cancel and (Greek Post) cachet on FDC
Greece 2740-2742 fdc Three stamps and (pictorial) cancel and (Greek Post) cachet on FDC, also back and insert
Greece 2740a-2742a folder Folder front, also pages 1-2 and pages 3-4
Greece 2743 (Mi2897) Self-adhesive, also booklet outside (front and back)
Greece 2744 (Mi2898) Self-adhesive, also booklet outside (front and back)
Grenada Grenadines 1625 (Mi1833) 1993 Aristotle with the Bust of Homer, painting by Rembrandt, 1653
Guinea Republic Mi6568 One of MS6 (Mi6568-6573) 2009 (2330th anniv. death, in 2008)
Lesotho 1221j (Mi1571) One stamp and in (left) margin of MS17 (1221 (a-q + label)) (Mi1562-1578) 1999 "Ibn Rushd" translating Artistotle
Liberia 655 (Mi898A)
i655 (Mi898B)

Imperforate
1973 Aristotle, Ptolemy, and Copernicus
Malawi Unknown a (Mi?) One of MS2 (a-b) 2008
Mali 315 (Mi655)
i315

Imperforate
1978 (2300th anniv. death)
Mali 315 proof Signed proof
Mali 315 proofs1 Color proof pair
Mali 315 proofs2 Color proof pair (different)
Mali 315 proofs3 Color proofs
Mali Unknown ms fdc (Mi none fdc) Cachet on FDC [known illegal issue] 2017
Mali Unknown ss fdc (BL? fdc) (Multi-color printed) cachet on FDC bust of Aristotle (at left in cachet); (also, the inset at the lower right in the cachet depicts Aristotle in a detail image from The School of Athens painting)
Manama Mi1143 1972 Aristotle with the Bust of Homer, painting by Rembrandt, 1653
Mexico C579 (Mi1603) 1978 2300th anniv. death
Mexico C579 fdc1 Stamp and (pictorial) cancel and (dark-blue printed) cachet on FDC
Mexico C579 fdc2 Stamp and (pictorial) cancel and (red and black printed) cachet on FDC
Mexico C580 (Mi1604)
Mexico C580 fdc Stamp and (pictorial) cancel and (blue and green and black printed) cachet on FDC
Redonda (Antigua) Unknown (Mi?) 1987
Redonda (Antigua) Unknown fdc Stamp on FDC (Fleetwood cachet)
Russia (USSR) 5601 fdc (Fleetwood) cachet on FDC, also back 1987
St. Thomas and Prince Islands Mi3385 One of MS4 (Mi3385-3388) 2008
Spain 2491 (Mi2743) One of booklet pane of 6 (2496a (2491-2496)), from booklet (2496b) 1986 Aristotle and quote; (2370th anniv. birth)
Uruguay 1628 (Mi2192) 1996
Vatican City 1041 (Mi1210) 1997 Aristotle describing various species, from his De Historia Animalium

1This postal card is only one of a large number of similar cards issued by China for Aristotle. No effort is made to list all such cards.


Theophrastus

Theophrastus of Lesbos
(372? - 287? BC)

Theophrastus was a pupil of Aristotle. He was the first natural philosopher to take a systematic approach to the study of botany, and has been referred to as the father of taxonomy. He was aware of the influence of various factors such as soil and climate on the growth of plants.

Theophrastus was interested in all aspects of natural science. After Aristotle wrote his book Meteorologica, Theophrastus in turn wrote a book on weather forecasting called De Signis Tempestatum (On Weather Signs). It included a large number of empirical rules relating certain conditions to the expected weather. For example, a ring around the Moon was a sign of possible rain. Another sign of rain was "if the Sun when it rises has a black mark, or if it rises out of clouds". The work of Aristotle and Theophrastus in meteorology had such authority that it remained the dominant influence in the study of weather and weather forecasting for nearly 2000 years.

Theophrastus is included in Raphael's painting The School of Athens. The special School of Athens web page identifies Theophrastus in the painting, includes all philatelic items that feature it in full or in part, and identifies the Ancient Contributors found in those items, which are not duplicated in this page unless they also include a reference to Theophrastus from a different source.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
(See also The School of Athens(painting by Raphael) for additional items)
St. Thomas and Prince Islands Mi3386 One of MS4 (Mi3385-3388) 2008 "Teofrasto 372 - 288 BC", but image is of Paracelsus (Theophrastus Philippus Aureolus Bombastus von Hohenheim)


Aratus of Soli

Aratus of Soli
(315? - 240? BC)

Aratus was a Greek didactic poet whose major known work, Phenomena, is a long poem based on some elements of what are now known as astronomy and meteorology. The first part of the poem describes the constellations and other celestial phenomena. The second part, titled Diosemeia ("Signs and Portents"), discusses weather lore, signs and portents based upon atmospheric or astronomical phenomena or animal behaviours. Aratus may have been inspired by Aristotle's Meteorologica, Theophrastus' On Weather Signs, and Hesiod's Works and Days.

Here is a sample from Diosemeia:

And weather foul expect, when thou canst trace
A baleful halo circling Phoebus' face
Of murky darkness, and approaching near:
If of two circles, fouler weather fear.

And another:

No weather calm expect, when floating high
Cloud rides o'er cloud: when clamorous cry
The geese; when through the night the raven caws;
And chatter loud at even-tide the daws.
When sparrows ceaseless chirp at dawn of day,
And in their holes the wren and robin stay.

The above excerpts are from an English translation by John Lamb:

Lamb, John, 1848: The Phenomena and Diosemeia of Aratus. London, John W. Parker, West Strand, 128 pp. Here is a copy of that translation.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Bolivia BL203 (Mi1120C) In (upper-left) margin of SS1 1993 Background of sheet the same design as Paraguay 1888
Bolivia BL203 muestra BL203 with extra "muestra" perforations
Paraguay 1888 (BL336) In (upper-left) margin of SS1 1979 Background of sheet the same design as Bolivia BL203


Archimedes

Archimedes
(287? - 212? BC)

Archimedes was a Greek scientist who studied (among many other things) buoyancy and the hydrostatic principle, both of which are important concepts in meteorology. Archimedes' principle states that any body completely or partially submerged in a fluid is acted upon by an upward force equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the body. If the displaced weight of fluid is greater than the weight of the body, then the body is forced upward. This is the situation in which an air parcel in the atmosphere rises if it is warmer than the surrounding atmosphere. In this situation, the parcel is said to have positive buoyancy. Positive buoyancy is one necessary condition in the formation of convective clouds (cumulus, cumulus congestus and cumulonimbus).

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Archimedes (on non-launch-cover postal items)
Altai Unknown d (Mi?) One of MS8 (a-h), also from imperforate MS8 (a-h), and from self-adhesive MS28 2011
Austria None (Pictorial) cancel on cover, also detail 1964 "Archimedes" crater
Belgium B1059 fdc (Mi? fdc) Cachet on FDC, also back 1987 (2200th anniv. death, in 1988)
Chad Unknown ss (BL?) SS1 2015 "Archmčde de Syracuse"
China (People's Republic) None Postal card back1, also front 2009?
France 1052 (Mi?) 1963 bathyscaphe Archimčde
France 1052 fdc1 Stamp and (text) cancel and (Éditions J.F.) cachet on FDC
France 1052 fdc2 Stamp and (text) cancel and (Éditions P.J.) cachet on FDC
France 1052 fdc3 Stamp and (text) cancel and (Éditions P.A.C.) cachet on FDC
France 1052 sc Souvenir card
France 1052 maxi1 Maxicard
France 1052 maxi2 Maxicard (different)
France 1052 maxi3 Maxicard (different)
France 1052 maxi4 Maxicard (different)
France 1052 maxi5 Maxicard (different)
France 1052 cover (Mi? cover) Stamp and cancel on cover 1963 bathyscaphe Archimčde
France None (Pictorial) cancel on cover 1970 Ballon l'Archimčde
France None (Magenta rubber-stamp) cachet on cover 1979 Bathyscaphe Archimčde
France 1863-1864 fdc (Mi2387-2388 fdc) (Éditions CEF) cachet on FDC card 1983 "Archimčde"
France None (Multi-color printed) cachet (reproduction of France 1052) on cover 2002 Bathyscaphe Archimčde
Gabon Unknown ss (BL none)
Unknown iss
SS1 [known illegal issue]
Imperforate SS1
2010
Gabon Unknown ss fdc
Unknown iss fdc
SS1 and cachet on FDC
Imperforate SS1 and cachet on FDC
Germany (East) 1501 (Mi?) 1973
Greece 1460 (Mi?) 1983
Greece 1460 maxi Maxicard
Guinea Republic Unknown ss (BL?) SS1 2006
Guinea-Bissau Mi3992 2008
Guinea-Bissau BL679 SS1
Guinea-Bissau BL679 fdc SS1 and cachet on FDC
Italy 1559 (Mi?) 1983 "Archimede"
Italy 1559 maxi Maxicard
Italy 1558-1559 fdc1 One of two stamps and (Capitolium no.493) cachet on FDC
Italy 1558-1559 fdc2 One of two stamps on FDC (Roma cachet)
Italy 1558-1559 fdc3 One of two stamps and (Filagrano) cachet on FDC
Italy 2373 (Mi?) 2000 Archimedes was killed in 212 BC by the Romans under general Marcellus when they captured Syracuse. Archimedes had proved that the volume of a sphere within a circumscribed cylinder (depicted in the stamp) is 2/3 that of the cylinder, and found the result so satisfying that he requested that a sphere and cylinder be placed on his eventual tomb. Marcellus granted that wish. In 75 BC Cicero found the tomb, which was confirmed as Archimedes' by the sphere and cylinder.
Italy 3199 (Mi?) 2013 (2700th anniv. birth)
Malawi Unknown b (Mi?) One of MS2 (a-b) 2008
Mali Unknown a (Mi none) One of MS2 (a-b) [known illegal issue] 2011
Mali Unknown ms fdc MS2 on FDC
Nicaragua C765 (Mi?)
C765 back
1971 Archimedes' principle of mass displacement
Nicaragua C761-765 fdc One of five stamps on FDC
Romania None Printed stamp and cachet on stamped envelope 2000
Romania 5636-5639 fdc (Mi6908-6911 fdc) (Grey and gold printed) cachet on FDC 2014 "Arhimede"
Russia 6171 (Mi335) One of block of 6 (6174a (6169-6174)) (Mi334-339), or three of MS18 (6174b (3x (6169-6174))) 1993 Archimedes screw frigate (and Ivan A. Amosov)
San Marino 1021 (Mi?) From MS40 (1021a (40x 1021)) 1982 "Archimčde"
San Marino 1021 maxi1 Maxicard
San Marino 1021 maxi2 Maxicard (different)
San Marino 1021-1022+1030 fdc One of three stamps on FDC
San Marino 1021+1030 fdc One of two stamps on FDC
Spain 1159 (Mi?) 1963
Spain 1159 maxi Maxicard
United States 5278 fdc (Mi? fdc) (Therome) cachet on FDC 2018 "Archimedes of Siracusa"

1This postal card is only one of a large number of similar cards issued by China for Archimedes. No effort is made to list all such cards.

Country Cancel Date Cancel Location Type of Item Notes on Content
Archimedes (on satellite launch covers)
United States 1968-12-21 Patrick AFB, FL (SpaceCraft/Swanson) insert2 from Apollo-8 launch cover, also insert2 back and insert1 "Archimedes"


Bing Li

Bing Li
(3rd century BC)

In 250 BC, Bing Li was the governor of Shu (today the province of Sichuan). China was known as a land of droughts and floods, and the Yellow River in particular was known as the "father of floods", so that water management and flood control were critical issues. Bing Li worked to mitigate the effects of the droughts and floods that were a neverending part of the Chinese climate. In this, he was carrying on the tradition established by King Da Yu some 1800 years earlier.

Li's main accomplishment was the building of the first dam at a place called Dujiangyan. The dam was part of a project to divert the flow of the Minjiang River, a tributary of the Yangtze. The diverted water was directed into a series of spillways and channels that could be opened to irrigate fields in times of drought, and closed in times of flooding. Li had three stone figures representing gods of flood control in the form of men placed in the fields as gauges. If their feet were visible, then it was considered that drought conditions prevailed, and the gates were opened to let in water. If their shoulders were submerged, floodwaters had risen too high and the gates were closed.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
China (People's Republic) 1637 (Mi?) 1980


Hipparchus

Hipparchus of Alexandria
(190? - 120? BC)

Hipparchus of Alexandria was the greatest of the Greek astronomers. He produced an astrometeorological calendar of a traditional type dating back to Hesiod, which related expected weather conditions to astronomical events such as the risings and settings of stars and constellations. Unfortunately, Hipparchus' calendar is now lost.

Writings by Ptolemy are the source of most of our knowledge about Hipparchus. In particular, Ptolemy suggests in his Phases of the Fixed Stars and Collection of Weather Signs that Hipparchus was one of his sources.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Hipparchus (on non-launch-cover postal items)
Andorra (French) 403-404 sc1 (Mi423-424 sc1) (La Poste) souvenir card 1991 "Hipparque" (Hipparchus)
Andorra (French) 403-404 sc2 (Mi423-424 sc2) (Edicions PUJOL) souvenir card (text cancel) "Hiparc" (Hipparchus)
Andorra (French) 403-404 sc3 (Mi423-424 sc3) (Edicions PUJOL) souvenir card (pictorial cancel)
Greece 835 (Mi?) 1965
Greece 835 fdc Stamp on FDC

Country Cancel Date Cancel Location Type of Item Notes on Content
Hipparchus (on satellite launch covers)
French Guiana 1989-08-08 Kourou (C.E. SEP Section Philatélie) cachet on HIPPARCOS and TV-Sat-2 launch cover "Hipparque"


Virgil

Virgil
(Publius Virgil Maro)
(70 - 19 BC)

Virgil was a Roman poet who delighted in nature, but also sought to understand it through natural philosophy (the science of the time). He included weather signs in a handbook of animal husbandry. His work Georgics consisted of some 2000 lines of poetry on agriculture and weather. Here is an excerpt:

What need to tell of autumn's storms and stars,
And wherefore men must watch,
When now the day grows shorter, and more soft the summer's heat?
When Spring the rain-bringer comes rushing down,
Or when the beards of harvest on the plain bristle already ...

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Aegean Islands 3 (Mi?) Italy 248 overprinted 1930 2000th anniv. birth
Aegean Islands 4 (Mi?) Italy 249 overprinted
Aegean Islands 5 (Mi?) Italy 250 overprinted
Aegean Islands 6 (Mi?) Italy 251 overprinted
Aegean Islands 7 (Mi?) Italy 252 overprinted
Aegean Islands 8 (Mi?) Italy 253 overprinted
Aegean Islands 9 (Mi?) Italy 254 overprinted
Aegean Islands 10 (Mi?) Italy 255 overprinted
Aegean Islands 11 (Mi?) Italy 256 changed colors and overprinted
Aegean Islands C4 (Mi?) Italy C23 changed colors and overprinted
Aegean Islands C5 (Mi?) Italy C24 changed colors and overprinted
Aegean Islands C6 (Mi?) Italy C25 overprinted
Aegean Islands C7 (Mi?) Italy C26 overprinted
France 1781 (Mi?) 1981 2000th anniv. death
Guinea Republic Mi3916 One of MS8 (Mi3916-3924) 2002 Part of the painting The Barque of Dante (Dante and Virgil in Hell) by Eugčne Delacroix; Virgil (in brown robe); (2020th anniv. death, in 2001)
Italy 248 (Mi?) 1930 2000th anniv. birth
Italy 249 (Mi?)
Italy 249 specimen Overprinted "specimen"
Italy 250 (Mi?)
Italy 251 (Mi348)
Italy 252 (Mi?)
Italy 252 specimen Overprinted "specimen"
Italy 253 (Mi?)
Italy 254 (Mi?)
Italy 254 specimen Overprinted "specimen"
Italy 255 (Mi?)
Italy 256 (Mi?)
Italy C23 (Mi?)
Italy C24 (Mi?)
Italy C25 (Mi?)
Italy C26 (Mi?)
Italy 1491 (Mi?) 1981 2000th anniv. death
Italy None (Pictorial) cancel on cover 1981 2000th anniv. death
Monaco 626 (Mi?) 1966 Dante and Virgil boating across the muddy swamp of the 5th Circle from Dante`s Inferno (scene similar to the painting The Barque of Dante (Dante and Virgil in Hell) by Eugčne Delacroix, see Sierra Leone 1616d and Guinea Republic Mi3916)
Monaco 1360 (Mi?) 1982 6th book of the Aenid; (2000th anniv. death)
San Marino 1003 (Mi?) From strip of 3 (1005a (1003-1005)) 1981 2000th anniv. death
San Marino 1004 (Mi?)
San Marino 1005 (Mi?)
Sierra Leone 1616d (Mi1993) One of MS8 (1616 (a-h + label) (Mi1990-1998) 1993 Part of the painting The Barque of Dante (Dante and Virgil in Hell) by Eugčne Delacroix, Virgil (in brown robe)
Somalia 119 (Mi?) Italy 248 overprinted and changed colors 1930 2000th anniv. birth
Somalia 120 (Mi?) Italy 249 overprinted
Somalia 121 (Mi?) Italy 250 overprinted
Somalia 122 (Mi156) Italy 251 overprinted and changed colors
Somalia 123 (Mi?) Italy 252 overprinted
Somalia 124 (Mi?) Italy 253 overprinted
Somalia 125 (Mi?) Italy 254 overprinted
Somalia 126 (Mi?) Italy 255 overprinted and changed colors
Somalia 127 (Mi?) Italy 256 overprinted and changed colors
Tripolitania 43 (Mi?) Italy 248 changed colors and overprinted 1930 2000th anniv. birth
Tripolitania 44 (Mi?) Italy 249 overprinted
Tripolitania 45 (Mi?) Italy 250 overprinted
Tripolitania 46 (Mi?) Italy 251 overprinted
Tripolitania 47 (Mi?) Italy 252 changed colors and overprinted
Tripolitania 48 (Mi?) Italy 253 overprinted
Tripolitania 49 (Mi?) Italy 254 overprinted
Tripolitania 50 (Mi?) Italy 255 overprinted
Tripolitania 51 (Mi?) Italy 256 overprinted
Tripolitania C4 (Mi?) Italy C23 overprinted
Tripolitania C5 (Mi?) Italy C24 overprinted
Tripolitania C6 (Mi?) Italy C25 overprinted
Tripolitania C7 (Mi?) Italy C26 overprinted
Tunisia 673 (Mi?) 1976 Detail from a mosaic depicting Virgil writing the Aeneid with the two Muses Melpomene (tragedy) and Clio (history)
Tunisia 1279 (Mi?) 2002 Mosaic depicting Virgil writing the Aeneid with the two Muses Melpomene (tragedy) and Clio (history)
Vatican City 685+label (Mi?+label) From MS16 (685a (16x 685 + 9 labels)) 1981 2000th anniv. death
Vatican City 686+label (Mi?+label) From MS16 (686a (16x 686 + 9 labels))
Vatican City 685 fdc Stamp and (pictorial) cancel and (The Golden Series) cachet on FDC
Vatican City 686 fdc Stamp and (pictorial) cancel and (The Golden Series) cachet (different) on FDC
Vatican City 685-686 fdc-bulletin FDC Bulletin, also front and back


Strabo

Strabo
(64? BC - 23? AD)

Strabo was a Greek geographer and historian. His work Geography, completed just before his death, was an attempt to bring together all known geographical knowledge, and covered all the countries and peoples known to the Romans and the Greeks at that time. It includes an early description of the weather in the British Isles:

"Their weather is more rainy than snowy; and on the days of clear sky fog prevails so long a time that throughout a whole day the Sun is to be seen for only three or four hours round about midday". From this description, some would say that not much has changed in the British weather during the last 2000 years!

Strabo is included in Raphael's painting The School of Athens. He was also interested in astronomy and studied celestial cartography, and so is shown holding the celestial globe in the painting. The special School of Athens web page identifies Strabo in the painting, includes all philatelic items that feature it in full or in part, and identifies the Ancient Contributors found in those items, which are not duplicated in this page unless they also include a reference to Strabo from a different source.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
(See The School of Athens (painting by Raphael) for all items)


Ovid

Ovid
(Publius Ovidius Nasso)
(43 BC - 17 AD)

Ovid was a Roman poet. He was banished (for reasons that remain obscure) by Emperor Augustus in 8 AD to Tomis (modern Constanta, Romania) on the west coast of the Black Sea. There he suffered because of the harsh climate compared to what he was used to in Rome. His works Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto describe the Black Sea weather, and more particularly the winter. In them he lamented his exile and described his physical and emotional discomfort.

In terms of weather, the poems were probably accurate in some ways and exaggerated in others. In Tristia, Ovid makes many observations related to the weather he experienced, such as:

  1. the continuous blanket of winter snow is turned to ice by the wind, and thereafter remains impervious to the Sun and rain;
  2. no period of thaw is to be had between snowfalls, and in some places the snow can remain on the ground for two years on end;
  3. the wind can cause towers and houses to crash to the ground;
  4. people wear skins and trousers to protect themselves from the cold, with only their faces showing, and men's beards shine from the frost on them;
  5. if wine is left outside it freezes, taking the shape of its container, and so people drink it in chunks rather than draughts;
  6. streams ice over, and drinking water is removed from them in pieces;
  7. even the Danube freezes over, with water flowing only beneath the ice. Then men and horses can walk on the ice;
  8. in summer, the Danube wards off the surrounding barbarian tribes, but in winter they can cross the frozen river easily.

What is accurate and what is exaggerated in Ovid's description of the winter weather in Constanta is uncertain, but it is clear that he must have suffered through some very cold winters indeed! He never gave up hope that he might return to Rome, but died in Constanta.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Italy 721 (Mi979) 1957 2000th anniv. birth
Italy 721 fdc Stamp on FDC
Romania 1183 (Mi1669) 1957 2000th anniv. birth; statue at Constanta
Romania 1369 (Mi1900) 1960 Statue at Constanta
Romania 1875 (Mi2540) 1966 Statue at Constanta
Romania None (Multi-color printed) cachet on postal card 1997 2040th anniv. birth; statue at Constanta
Romania 4604 (Mi5771) 2003 Statue at Constanta


Ptolemy

Ptolemy
(90? - 168? AD)

Ptolemy was a Greek mathematician, geographer, astronomer and astrologer who contributed to astrometeorology (relating astronomical phenomena to the weather). In his work Phases of the Fixed Stars and Collection of Weather Signs, he described techniques to forecast the weather according to astronomical events, based on geometrical and mathematical models of planetary movements that were in turn based on both historical observations and his own observations. Ptolemy described how to calculate planetary positions and provided guidelines on how to interpret their effects on the weather. This contributed to the Greek tradition of astrometeorological calendars relating astronomical phenomena to weather forecasts. Ptolemy's work became part of the ancient Greek, Indian, Persian and Roman astrometeorological tradition. He introduced some new ideas, however. For example, he emphasized first and second magnitude stars rather than the constellations.

Phases of the Fixed Stars and Collection of Weather Signs is also important because it is a source of information about earlier authorities in the astrometeorological calendar tradition, including Hipparchus. The tradition in fact dates back as far as Hesiod in the 8th century BC.

Ptolemy is included in Raphael's painting The School of Athens. The special School of Athens web page identifies Ptolemy in the painting, includes all philatelic items that feature it in full or in part, and identifies the Ancient Contributors found in those items, which are not duplicated in this page unless they also include a reference to Ptolemy from a different source.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Ptolemy (on non-launch-cover postal items)
(See also The School of Athens (painting by Raphael) for additional items)
Armenia Unknown (Mi?) 2016 "Ptolemy's greater Armenia"
Belgium BL167 (Scott ?) In (upper-right) margin of MS2 (a-b) 2012
Bolivia BL203 (Mi1120C) In (upper-right) margin of SS1 1993 Background of sheet the same design as Paraguay 1888
Bolivia BL203 muestra BL203 with extra "muestra" perforations
Bophuthatswana (South Africa) 266-269 fdc (Mi? fdc) Cachet on FDC 1991
Bosnia and Herzegovina (Serb Admin.) Unknown fdc (Mi613 fdc) FDC back, also front 2014 "Ptolemy's geocentric model"
Burundi 433 (Mi939-942)
i433
MS4 (433 (a-d))
Imperforate MS4 (i433 (a-d))
1973
Burundi 434a (BL69)
i434a
MS16 (431-434) (Mi931-946)
Imperforate MS16 (i431-i434)
Cyprus 481 (Mi?) 1977 "Silver Tetradrachm of Ptolemy VIII" (not the Claudius Ptolemy of interest in this page)
Germany (East) None (Text) cancel and (Baustein no.1) cachet on postcard 1981
Hungary 4414 (Mi5877) 2017 Ptolemy depicted in the lower left of the gold inset; the stamp commemorates Regiomontanus
Hungary 4414 fdc Stamp on FDC
Kalmoukia None a One of local post MS6 (a-f) 1997 "Heliocentric system of Ptolemy and Copernicus" (in Cyrillic text, and depicted)
Liberia 655 (Mi898A)
i655 (Mi898B)

Imperforate
1973 Aristotle, Ptolemy, and Copernicus
Liberia Mi2893-2909 margin In (left) margin of MS17 (Mi2893-2909 + label), also Mi2894 2000 "Claudius Ptolemy's star charts"
Malawi Unknown (Mi?) 2008 "Ptolomy"
Mali Unknown ms (Mi none) In (lower-left) margin of MS2 (a-b) [known illegal issue] 2017
Mali Unknown ms fdc MS2 and cachet on FDC
Paraguay C336 (BL174) SS1 1971 "Ptolomeus"; also Kepler
Paraguay 1888 (BL336) In (upper-right) margin of SS1 1979 Background of sheet the same design as Bolivia BL203
Rwanda Unknown a (Mi none) One of MS15 (a-o) [known illegal issue] 2010 Ptolemaic geocentric model
Sri Lanka 1128 (Mi?) 1995
United States 1919 sc (Mi1488 sc) (Reader's Digest) souvenir card (with 1919 fdc), also back 1981 "Claudius Ptolemaeus" and "Ptolemy"
United States 2742 fdc (Mi2338 fdc) (Mystic Stamp Company) back of cover, also front 1993 "In 150 AD, the Greek astronomer Ptolemy developed a geocentric theory"
Yemen Arab Republic 260 (Mi903A)
i260 (Mi903B)
260g (Mi910)
From MS12 (12x 260)
From imperforate MS12 (12x i260)
From imperforate MS12 (12x 260g) with changed colors
1969

Country Cancel Date Cancel Location Type of Item Notes on Content
Ptolemy (on satellite launch covers)
United States 1967-04-19 Cape Canaveral FL (SpaceCraft) insert from Surveyor-3 event cover, also front "Ptolemaeus"


Galen

Galen
(130? - 200? AD)

Galen was a Greek physician. For one of his treatments, bloodletting, he believed that the amount of blood to let depended not only on the patient's age, constitution and location, but also on the season and the weather. In general, Galen thought that living bodies are composed of an unequal mixture of hot, cold, wet and dry - the "contraries" of Aristotle. He believed that the mixture could become "ill-balanced", and that these imbalances could have various effects on living bodies, including sickness. Galen wrote a commentary on Hippocrates' Airs, Waters and Places. He believed, as did Hippocrates, that climatic and environmental effects were one cause of diseases.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
China (People's Republic) 2147 fdc (Mi? fdc) Cachet on FDC, also back 1987
Greece 1842 (Mi?) 1996
Hungary 3213 (Mi?) 1989
Yemen Arab Republic 6675 (Mi529A)
i6675 (Mi529B)

Imperforate
1966
Yemen Arab Republic 6678 (Mi532A)
i6678 (Mi532B)

Imperforate


Isidore

Isidore of Sevilla
(Saint Isidorus Hispalensis)
(560? - 636)

Isidorus of Sevilla was a Spanish bishop, historian and author. In his work De Natura Rerum (On the Nature of Things), he wrote about astronomy, cosmology and meteorology. In the chapters on meteorology, he wrote about thunder, clouds, rainbows and wind. "Corruption of the air" (pestilence) was also discussed. However, he was hampered by the prevailing theological view that the only legitimate way to study natural science was through scripture.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Spain 1202 (Mi?) 1964 Crypt of San Isidro in León
Spain 1202 fdc1 Stamp and cachet on FDC
Spain 1202 fdc2 Stamp and cachet (different) on FDC
Spain 1202 maxi Stamp on maxicard
Spain P151 1000 pesetas (banknote) 1965
Spain 1742 (Mi?) 1972 Mural in Collegiate Basilica of San Isidro in León
Spain 1743 (Mi?)
Spain None (Purple pictorial) cancel on cover with 4x 1202 1984 San Isidro (in cancel)
Spain 2493 (Mi2745) One of booklet pane of 6 (2496a (2391-2496)) 1986 San Isidro and text from Etymologias; (1350th anniv. death)
Spain 3716 fdc (Mi? fdc) (Pictorial) cancel and (multi-color printed) cachet on cover 2010 Biblioteca Visigótha San Isidoro de León


al Jahiz

al Jahiz
(al Hayawan)
(776? - 869?)

Al Jahiz was an early Arab writer, zoologist and philosopher. In his work Kitab al Hayawan (The Book of Animals), he introduced the idea that the climate and environmental factors were important in the behaviour and evolution of animals. Goethe would later say that al Jahiz was "a Darwinian before Darwin".

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Qatar 232 (Mi439) 1971
Syria 519 (Mi1043) 1968
Syria 520 (Mi1044)


al Kindi

al Kindi, Yaqub Ibn Ishaq
(800? - 873?)

Al Kindi was an Arab scholar who wrote hundreds of books, most relating to the science of the time. Several of his works relate to meteorology, optics and the reflection of light. Two of his books can even be considered as early treatments of air pollution: A Treatise on the Incenses that Treat the Atmosphere against Epidemics, and A Treatise on the Drugs Which Cure from Annoying Odours. Al Kindi was perhaps the leading exponent of Arabic meteorology, which was essentially Aristotelian, though he did work to simplify the complicated assumptions made by Aristotle centuries earlier in his treatment of meteorology.

Al-Kindi was one of the Islamic scientific scholars who did significant work in astrometeorology (relating astronomical phenomena to the weather). In an article titled "Medieval Weather Prediction" (Physics Today, 74(4), 38. (2021); doi: 10.1063/PT.3.4724), Anne Lawrence-Mathers describes his contributions:

"Perhaps the most celebrated [of the Islamic scholars] for his meteorological expertise, at least in the Latin world, was al-Kindi. Treatises on weather forecasting, extracted from his longer works and circulated in Latin, remained popular in the Renaissance. They offered a clear explanation of the specific causes of heat, cold, drought, and rain and how their interactions in the atmosphere produce weather."

"Al-Kindi's conceptual framework and the central idea in his treatises, that the driving force for weather is heat generated by planetary movements, was Aristotelian. The concept was linked to the idea of four elements that compose the sublunar zone -- earth, air, fire, and water -- and their intrinsic connections to the primary qualities of hot, cold, dry, and moist. Astrologers believed that the planets and the fixed stars, including those making up the constellations to which the houses of the zodiac were linked, had special affinities with individual elements and qualities. Those qualities determined the nature of the effects each planet would have on the terrestrial world as it moved through the heavens."

"The first step in al-Kindi's forecasting method, as typical in astrometeorology, was to calculate the relevant planetary positions and directions. Next, forecasters would start their interpretation of the weather with the position and strength of the Sun. In al-Kindi's model, the Moon had particular power over the elements of earth and water, both of which would be modulated on any given day by its position relative to the Sun. Forecasters needed to assess that interaction to predict winds because they believed the joint influence of the Sun and Moon determined whether the air in a particular region would be hot or cold. They then considered the other five known planets and calculated the factors affecting each one individually before incorporating the planetary groupings and interactions."

"The techniques in al-Kindi's method required that forecasters confidently judge which factors would have the greatest effects and for how long, and they accepted that experience was crucial in making a successful prediction. Experts put their trusted methods on record for the benefit of others. Especially influential was al-Kindi's application of the concept known as 'opening of the doors'. The treatises do not explain the phrase, but it hints that rain was caused by an almost physical change in the atmosphere, driven by specific combinations of planets and their movements in relation to one another." Indeed, "the timing and extent of rainfall was sufficiently important in the Islamicate world that treatises on weather forecasting were frequently referred to as 'books of rain'."

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Egypt 998 (Mi1210) 1975
Egypt 996-998 fdc One of three stamps and cachet on FDC
Iraq 303 (Mi337) 1962
Mali C107 (Mi244)
iC107

Imperforate
1970
Syria 1109 (Mi1672) 1987 (possible) al Kindi
Syria 1320 (Mi1922) 1994
Yemen Mutawakelite Kingdom Mi363 1967


al Razi

Razi, Abu-Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakarayya
(Rhazes)
(860? - 925?)

Al Razi was a Persian physician. Following the tradition that originated with Hippocrates and Galen, he wrote in his al-Hawi fi al-Tibb that well-balanced and clean air are one essential prerequisite for good health: polluted air would cause diseases in men. Avicenna in his work al-Qanun fi al-Tibb had much the same idea. One day, al Razi was asked by the Caliph to choose a site for the proposed Adudi Hospital in Baghdad. To find the answer, he sent out several of his students to hang pieces of fresh meat in the different quarters of the city. The next day, the site at which the meat showed the least tendency to putrefaction was chosen to build the hospital.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Iran 1312 (Mi?) 1964
Iran 1313 (Mi?)
Iran 1989 (Mi?) 1978
Syria C414 (Mi1022) 1968
Syria 1256 (Mi1842) 1991


al Farabi

al Farabi, Abu al Nasr
(870? - 950?)

Al Farabi was an Afghan philosopher and scientist. He wrote such rich commentaries on Aristotle's physics, meteorology and logic, in addition to a large number of books on subjects of his own original contribution, that he came to be known as the "Second Teacher" (Aristotle being the first). Some of al Farabi's work paved the way for the later work of Avicenna.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Djibouti Unknown f (Mi none) One of MS6 (a-f) [known illegal issue] 2010
Djibouti Unknown c+selvedge (Mi?+selvedge) One of MS3 (a-f) and selvedge
Egypt 997 (Mi1211) 1975
Egypt 996-998 fdc One of three stamps and cachet on FDC
Iran 947 (Mi?) 1951 (1000th anniv. death)
Iran 948 (Mi?)
Iran 1854 (Mi?) 1975
Iran 2057 (Mi?) 1980 al Farabi (left), al Biruni, and Avicenna
Iran Unknown1 (Mi?) Stamp and label 2009? (possible) al Farabi (on label)
Iran Unknown2 (Mi?)
Iran Unknown3 (Mi?)
Kazakhstan P7 1 tenge (banknote), also back 1993
Kazakhstan P14 200 tenge (banknote), also back 1993
Kazakhstan P16 1000 tenge (banknote), also back 1994
Kazakhstan 48 cover (Mi? cover) (Multi-color printed) cachet (including Kazakhstan P7) on cover 1994
Kazakhstan P17 2000 tenge (banknote), also back 1996
Kazakhstan P18 5000 tenge (banknote), also back 1998
Kazakhstan P20 200 tenge (banknote), also back 1999
Kazakhstan P20a 200 tenge (banknote), also back 1999
Kazakhstan P21 500 tenge (banknote), also back 1999
Kazakhstan P22 1000 tenge (banknote), also back 2000
Kazakhstan P23 2000 tenge (banknote), also back 2000
Kazakhstan P24 5000 tenge (banknote), also back 2001
Kazakhstan P25 10000 tenge (banknote), also back 2003
Kazakhstan P26 5000 tenge (banknote), also back 2001? P24 with independence overprint
Kazakhstan 936 (Mi1215) 2020 1150th anniv. birth
Kazakhstan 936a (BL?) MS4 (4x 936)
Qatar 234 (Mi441) 1971
Russia (USSR) 4360 (Mi4393) 1975
Tajikistan 487a (Mi777A) One of strip of 3 (487 (487 (a-c))) (Mi777A-779A), or two of MS6 (487d (3x (487 (a-c)))) 2017
Turkey 1037 (Mi?) 1950 (1000th anniv. death)
Turkey 1038 (Mi?)
Turkey 1039 (Mi?)
Turkey 1040 (Mi?)


al Hazen

al Hazen
(al Haitham)
(Abu Ali al Hasan ibn al Haitam)
(965 - 1040)

Al Hazen was an Arab and/or Persian scientist who discussed the density of the atmosphere, and correctly explained the refraction of light in the atmosphere. From his studies of refraction he determined that the atmosphere has a definite height, which he calculated to be about 50 km, and also that twilight is caused by refraction of solar radiation from beneath the horizon. For his pioneering work in these areas, he became known as the "Father of Optics".

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Algeria 1668 fdc1 (Mi? fdc1) (Multi-color printed) cachet on FDC 2015 "Ibn Al-Haytham"; (1050th anniv. birth; 975th anniv. death)
Algeria 1668 fdc2 (Mi? fdc2) (Algérie Poste) cachet on FDC
Central African Republic Unknown a (Mi?) One of MS4 (a-d) 2015 "Alhazen, 965 - c. 1040"; (1050th anniv. birth; 975th anniv. death)
Central African Republic Unknown fdc MS4 on FDC
Iraq 1992 (Mi1987) 2016
Iraq 1992 fdc Stamp and (pictorial) cancel and (multi-color printed) cachet on FDC, also back and insert
Iraq 1992 folder Folder, also back and inside
Jordan 682 (Mi812) 1971
Maldive Islands 3495b (Mi6017) One of MS4 (3495 (a-d)) (Mi6016-6019) 2015 "Ibn al-Haytham"
Maldive Islands 3495 fdc MS4 on FDC
Malawi Unknown (Mi?) 2008
Malawi Unknown ms (Mi?)
Unknown ims
On one of MS2 (a-b)
One of imperforate MS2
Malawi Unknown ms fdc
Unknown ims fdc
MS2 on FDC
Imperforate MS2 on FDC
Mongolia 2504d (Mi3383) One of MS20 (2504 (a-t)) (Mi3380-3399) 2001 (possible) al Hazen
Pakistan 281 (Mi?) 1969 "Ibn al Haitam" in words
Pakistan 281 fdc1 Stamp and (Karachi) cancel and cachet on FDC
Pakistan 281 fdc2 Stamp and (Lahore) cancel and cachet (same) on FDC
Pakistan 281 fdc3 Stamp and cachet (same) on FDC
Qatar 235 (Mi442) 1971


al Biruni

al Biruni, Abu al Rayhan
(973 - 1048)

Al Biruni was a Persian scholar and scientist. His Book of Instruction in the Elements of the Art of Astrology was in fact a primer of 11th century science. In what he called 'natural' astrology, he was concerned with meteorology, earthquakes, floods and all the other "vicissitudes and disasters" of nature.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Afghanistan 881 (Mi?) 1973 1000th anniv. birth
Algeria 511 (Mi?) 1974 (1000th anniv. birth, in 1973)
Iran Unknown (Mi?) Stamp and label 2009? al Biruni (on label)
Egypt 996 (Mi1209) 1975
Egypt 996-998 fdc One of three stamps and cachet on FDC
Guinea-Bissau Mi3936 2008 (950th anniv. death)
Guinea-Bissau BL671A SS1
Guinea-Bissau BL671A fdc
BL671B fdc
SS1 and cachet on FDC
Imperforate SS1 on FDC
Iran 1728 (Mi?) 1973 1000th anniv. birth
Iran 2057 (Mi?) 1980 al Farabi, al Biruni (centre), and Avicenna
Iran 3014b (Mi?) One of block of 4 (3014 (a-d)) 2010 "Abu Reyhan Biruni"
Pakistan 357 (Mi?) 1973 1000th anniv. birth
Pakistan 358 (Mi?)
Pakistan 357-358 fdc Two stamps and cachet on FDC
Russia (USSR) 4099 (Mi?) 1973 1000th anniv. birth
Syria 671 (Mi1259) 1973 925th anniv. death; (1000th anniv. birth)
Tunisia 763 (Mi?) 1980
Turkey 1948 (Mi?) 1973 (1000th anniv. birth)
Uzbekistan 920 (Mi1424) 2020


Avicenna

Avicenna
(Ibn Sina)
(980 - 1037)

Avicenna was an Persian physician, philosopher and natural scientist. His written works include his Encyclopaedia of Philosophy and Natural Sciences, in which he devotes six chapters to meteorology:

  1. Clouds and rain;
  2. Causes of rainbows;
  3. Features associated with Sun reflection on clouds, and rainbows;
  4. Winds;
  5. Thunder, lightning, comets and meteorites;
  6. Catastrophic events that affect the surface of the Earth.

Avicenna made repeated observations of rainbows, but was unable to produce a satisfactory explanation of the rainbow colors.

As a physician, Avicenna followed the school of thought originated by Hippocrates, and extended by Galen and al Razi regarding the relationship of good air to health and diseases. In Avicenna's work al-Qanun fi al-Tibb, he presented some guidelines on how to identify good air: "Air is deemed fresh when it is free from pollution with smoke and (water) vapour. It should be really free and open and not enclosed by walls or undercover. If however the outside air is polluted, indoors should be preferred. The best type of air is that which is pure, clean and free from vapour from ponds, ditches, bamboo fields, cabbages and the dense overgrowth of trees, such as yew-trees, walnuts and figs. It is also essential that air be free from pollution with foul gases. Good air should be open to fresh breezes and it should come from plains and high mountains. It should not be confined to pits and depressions where it warms up quickly by the rising Sun and cools down immediately after sunset. Air which is surrounded by recently-painted or plastered walls is not fresh. Air is not healthy if it produces choking or discomfort".

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
This list is an incomplete sample of the numerous postal items that contain this person.
Afghanistan 390 (Mi369) 1951
Afghanistan 391 (Mi370)
Algeria 650 (Mi?) 1980
Algeria 650 fdc Stamp and cancel and cachet on FDC
Austria 1208 (Mi?) 1982 Urine analysis, canone de Avicenna manuscript
Austria 1208 maxi Maxicard
Chad Unknown a (Mi?)
Unknown ia
One of MS4 (a-d)
One of imperforate MS4 (a-d)
2015 "Avicenna"
Comoro Islands 506 (Mi?)
i506

Imperforate
1980
Comoro Islands 506 proof1 Signed proof
Comoro Islands 506 proof2 Proof pair
Dubai C58 (Mi399) 1971
Egypt (UAR) 741 (Mi888) 1968
France 3156 (Mi?) 2005 (1025th anniv. birth)
Germany (East) 106 (Mi314) 1952
Hungary 3061 (Mi?) 1987
Iran B1 (Mi?) 1948 Surtax for reconstruction of Avicenna's tomb at Hamadan, but no direct reference to Avicenna
Iran B2 (Mi?)
Iran B3 (Mi?)
Iran B4 (Mi?)
Iran B5 (Mi?)
Iran B6 (Mi?) 1949 Surtax for reconstruction of Avicenna's tomb at Hamadan, but no direct reference to Avicenna
Iran B7 (Mi?)
Iran B8 (Mi?)
Iran B9 (Mi?)
Iran B10 (Mi?)
Iran B11 (Mi?)
Iran B12 (Mi?)
Iran B13 (Mi?)
Iran B14 (Mi?)
Iran B15 (Mi?)
Iran B17 (Mi?) 1950 Surtax for reconstruction of Avicenna's tomb at Hamadan, but no direct reference to Avicenna
Iran B18 (Mi?)
Iran B19 (Mi?)
Iran B20 (Mi?)
Iran B21 (Mi?)
Iran B31 (Mi?) 1954 Hamadan, site of Avicenna's tomb
Iran B32 (Mi?)
Iran B33 (Mi?) tower of Avicenna's new tomb
Iran B34 (Mi?) Avicenna's old tomb
Iran B35 (Mi?) Avicenna's new tomb
Iran B31-B35 fdc1 Five stamps and cachet on FDC
Iran B31-B35 fdc2 Five stamps and cachet (slightly different) on FDC
Iran 1226 (Mi?) 1962 Avicenna (at right)
Iran 1227 (Mi?)
Iran 1226-1227 fdc Two stamps and cachet on FDC
Iran 1773 (Mi?) 1974 Avicenna (right image of two in upper-right of stamp)
Iran 2057 (Mi?) 1980 al Farabi, al Biruni, and Avicenna (right)
Iran 2141 (Mi?) 1983
Iran 2141 fdc Stamp and cachet on FDC
Iran 2377 (Mi2349) From pair (2378a (2377-2378)) 1989
Iran 2378 (Mi2350)
Iran 2378a fdc1 Pair of stamps on FDC
Iran 2378a fdc2 Pair of stamps on FDC (different)
Iran 2378a fdc3 Two pairs of stamps and cachet on FDC
Iran 2529 (Mi?) One of pair (2530a (2529-2530)) 1992 Avicenna treating child
Iran 2530a fdc One of pair of stamps and cancel and cachet (which partially reproduces Iran 2141 at middle-right) on FDC
Iran 2895a (Mi?) From strip of 2 (2895 (a-b)) 2004 Avicenna memorial
Iran 2895b (Mi?)
Iran 2895 folder Folder
Iran Unknown1 (Mi?) Stamp and label 2009? Avicenna (on label)
Iran Unknown2 (Mi?) Avicenna (on label); Avicenna memorial (on stamp)
Iran Unknown fdc Stamp and label on FDC
Jordan 678 (Mi808) 1971
Kuwait 452 (Mi446) 1969 "Ibn Sina"
Kuwait 453 (Mi447)
Kuwait 452-453 fdc Two stamps on FDC
Kuwait 837 (Mi879) 1980
Kuwait 838 (Mi880)
Kuwait 837-838 fdc Two stamps on FDC
Lebanon 223 (Mi401) 1948
Lebanon 224 (Mi402)
Lebanon 224a (BL11) Two of imperforate MS10 (224a (220-224+C141-C145))
Lebanon None (5p) Revenue stamp 1961 Avicenna (at right)
Lebanon None (10p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (5p) Revenue stamp 1965 Avicenna (at right)
Lebanon None (10p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (5p) Revenue stamp 1967 Avicenna (at right)
Lebanon None (10p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (25p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (5p) Revenue stamp 1973 Avicenna (at right)
Lebanon None (10p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (25p) Revenue stamp
Lebanon None (5PL) Revenue stamp ~1980s Avicenna (at right
Lebanon None (1000L) Revenue stamp ~1992 Avicenna (at right
Lebanon None (500L) Revenue stamp 1992 Avicenna (at right)
Lebanon None (5L) Revenue stamp 199? Avicenna (at right)
Lebanon None (250LL on 5L) Revenue stamp 1994 Avicenna (at right)
Lebanon None (250LL) Revenue stamp 2006 Avicenna (at right)
Libya 872 (Mi?) 1980
Mali 373 (Mi?) 1980
Mali 373 ds Deluxe sheet (373)
Mali 373 proof Signed proof
Mali 374 (Mi?)
Mali 374 ds Deluxe sheet (374)
Mali 374 proof Signed proof
Mali 374 proofs Color proofs
Mauritania 438 (Mi669A)
i438 (Mi669B)

Imperforate
1980 (probable) silhouette of Avicenna
Mauritania 439 (Mi670A)
i439 (Mi670B)

Imperforate
Pakistan 229 (Mi?) 1966
Pakistan 229 fdc Stamp and cachet on FDC
Poland 558 (Mi773) 1952
Portugal 3543 (Mi?) 2013 1000th anniv. Avicenna's Canon of Medicine
Portugal 3544 (BL?) SS1
Qatar 237 (Mi444) 1971
Russia (USSR) None (Black rubber-stamp) cachet 1962 925th anniv. death
Russia (USSR) None (Multi-color printed) cachet on stamped envelope 1962? 925?th anniv. death
Russia (USSR) None (Multi-color printed) cachet on stamped envelope 1979
Russia (USSR) 4852 (Mi4981) 1980
Russia (USSR) 4852 fdc Stamp and cancel and cachet on FDC
Russia (USSR) None Extra (4852) stamp and cancel and cachet on stamped envelope 1980
Russia (USSR) None (Grey-green printed) cachet on stamped envelope 1983
Somalia Unknown (Mi?) 2003 "Avicenna"
Syria C340 (Mi904) 1965 Avicenna (at right)
Syria 932 (Mi1512) 1981
Tajikistan 267-272 (Mi?) Set of 6 stamps 2005
Tunisia 762 (Mi976A)
i762 (Mi976B)

Imperforate
1980 "980 Millenaire d'Avicenne"
Turkey 2158 (Mi?) 1980
Turkey 2159 (Mi?)
Turkey 2158-2159 fdc Two stamps and cancel and cachet on FDC
Yemen Arab Republic 6677 (Mi531A)
i6677 (Mi531B)

Imperforate
1966
Yemen Arab Republic 6680 (Mi534A)
i6680 (Mi534B)

Imperforate
Yemen Arab Republic 6681 (BL54) Imperforate SS1


Kuo

Kuo, Shen
(Cunzhong, Mengxi Weng)
(1031 - 1095)

Shen Kuo was a Chinese natural philosopher and savant who worked in all scientific areas. He experimented with making weather forecasts and made observations of atmospheric phenomena, some of which he published in 1088 in his Dream Pool Essays. There he included a vivid description of tornadoes, which was the first known discussion of them in east Asia. He also presented his ideas about rainbows: he believed that they were formed through a shadow effect when the Sun shone on falling rain. Roger Bacon would later (in the 13th century) conclude that the colors of the rainbow must be caused by the reflection and refraction of sunlight moving through raindrops. Kuo had also thought about refraction in a more general sense: he hypothesized that the Sun's rays must refract in the atmosphere before reaching the Earth's surface, so that observers of the Sun would not view it in its exact position. This was a novel idea for the time. In 1021 al Haitham in his Book of Optics would also discuss atmospheric refraction (with reference to twilight). In the Essays Kuo also noted a curious type of lightning that would no more than scorch the walls of a house it passed through, but would completely melt any metal objects found inside. Was this related to what is today called 'ball lightning'?

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Chad Unknown a (Mi?) One of MS4 (a-d) 2015 "Shen Kuo"; (985th anniv. birth, in 2016; 920th anniv. death)
China (People's Republic) 643 (Mi?) 1962
China (People's Republic) 644 (Mi?) Kuo making field notes
China (People's Republic) 643-646 fdc Two stamps on FDC, also back (As above for stamps)


Averroes

Averroes
(Ibn Rushd)
(1126 - 1198)

Averroes was an Andalusian Muslim philosopher, physician and writer. He produced a vast body of work, including commentaries on most of Aristotle's writings. He wrote two commentaries on Aristotle's Meteorologia (Short Commentary on the Meteorologia, and Middle Commentary on the Meteorologia). All his commentaries were translated from Arabic to Latin. In this way, Aristotle's pioneering works in natural philosophy, including meteorology, were transmitted to Europe, where they remained an important force in Western thought through the Middle Ages and the medieval period. In particular, Albertus Magnus commented on and taught the texts of Aristotle through the Latin translations of the commentaries of Averroes. Over the centuries, Averroes' original texts in Arabic were lost, but the Latin translations have survived.

Averroes is included in Raphael's painting The School of Athens. The special School of Athens web page identifies Averroes in the painting, includes all philatelic items that feature it in full or in part, and identifies the Ancient Contributors found in those items, which are not duplicated in this page unless they also include a reference to Averroes from a different source.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
(See also The School of Athens (painting by Raphael) for additional items)
Egypt 1095 (Mi1302) 1978 (780th anniv. death)
Egypt 1095 fdc Stamp and cancel and cachet on FDC
Jordan 679 (Mi809) 1971
Lesotho 1221j (Mi1571) One of MS17 (1221 (a-q + label)) (Mi1562-1578) 1999 (800th anniv. death) "Ibn Rushd"
Somalia Unknown (Mi?) 2003 "Averroe"
Spain 1461 (Mi?) From MS25 (1461a (25x 1641)) 1967 (840th anniv. birth, in 1966; 770th anniv. death, in 1968)
Spain 1461 fdc Stamp and cachet on FDC
Spain KM-none 5 ecu1 (pattern coin) 1993
Syria 832 (Mi1426) 1979 (780th anniv. death)
Tunisia 1171 (Mi?) 1998 (800th anniv. death)

1The Ecu (European Currency Unit) was a predecessor to the Euro. This Spanish 5 ecu is a pattern coin, and not legal tender.


Maimonides

Maimonides
(Moses Ben Maimon)
(1135 - 1204)

Maimonides was a Jewish writer who took a particular interest in questions of public health. He followed in the tradition of Hippocrates, Galen, al Razi and Avicenna. Like them, he believed that climate along with environmental and geographical factors influence diseases, and stressed that physicians should carefully study the climate of certain locations in order to better treat patients and maintain their health. Maimonides recommended the best possible place for the people to live, as follows: "If there is no choice in this matter, for we have grown up in the cities and have become accustomed to them, you should at least select from the cities one of open horizons, especially toward the north and the east, high in the hills or the mountains, and sparse in trees and waters. If you have no choice and cannot emigrate from the city, endeavour at least to dwell on the outskirts ith the city, facing north and east".

In the area of public health, Maimonides recommended fresh air, clean water, and a healthy diet. These were not new ideas, but he was one of the first to place these principles in the context of particular diseases such as asthma.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Antigua and Barbuda 860 (Mi866) 1985 "850th anniv. birth Maimonides"
Antigua and Barbuda 861 (BL94, Mi867) SS1
Antigua and Barbuda 861 fdc SS1 and (blue and black printed) cachet on FDC
Antigua and Barbuda 2385 (Mi3233-3249) In (left) margin of MS17 (2385 (a-q + label)) 2000 "1274: Thomas Aquinas (Naples, 1225), the greatest of the Scholastics, [was] influenced by Albertus Magnus; and Maimonides enlightens European theology with Aristotle's ideas"
Barbuda 748 (Mi?) Antigua and Barbuda 860 overprinted "Barbuda Mail" 1985 "Maimonides"; 850th anniv. birth
Barbuda 749 (BL?) SS1, Antigua and Barbuda 861 overprinted "Barbuda Mail"
Barbuda Unknown (Mi unlisted) In (left) margin of MS17 (a-q + label), Antigua and Barbuda 2385 overprinted 2000 "1274: Thomas Aquinas (Naples, 1225), the greatest of the Scholastics, [was] influenced by Albertus Magnus; and Maimonides enlightens European theology with Aristotle's ideas"
Bolivia 645a (BL149) SS1 1985 850th anniv. birth
Bolivia 645a fdc SS1 and cancel on FDC
British Palestine None Cinderella 1930s
Chad Unknown b (Mi none) One of MS9 (a-i) 2009
Chad Unknown fdc One of three stamps on FDC
Chad Unknown ms fdc MS9 on FDC
Chad Unknown b (Mi?)
Unknown ib
One of MS4 (a-d)
One of imperforate MS4 (a-d)
2009
Chad Unknown iss (BL?) Imperforate SS1
Chad Unknown fdc One of four stamps on FDC
Chad Unknown ms fdc
Unknown ims fdc
MS4 on FDC
Imperforate MS4 on FDC
Dominica 932 (Mi?) 1985 (850th anniv. birth)
Dominica 2185p (Mi2677) One stamp and in (left) margin of MS17 (2185 (a-q + label)) (Mi2762-2678) 1999 "Maimonides"
Gambia 2962a-b (Mi?) Strip of 2 (a-b) 2005 800th anniv. death
Gambia 2962 (Mi?) MS4 (2x (2962 (a-b)))
Grenada 1339 (Mi?) 1985 (850th anniv. birth)
Grenada 401 (Mi?) 1971
Grenada 402a (BL?) On one of MS2 (402a (401-402))
Grenada Grenadines 710 (Mi?) 1985 (850th anniv. birth)
Grenada Carriacou 2611 (Mi?) 2005 800th anniv. death
Grenada Carriacou 2611a (Mi?) MS4 (4x 2611)
Guinea Republic 932 (Mi?) 1985 Maimonides and Cordoba Jewish Quarter; 850th anniv. birth
Guinea Republic 932a (BL53) SS1 (932)
Israel 74+tab (Mi88+tab) Stamp and tab from MS16 (74a (16x 74)) 1953
Israel 74 fdc Stamp on FDC
Israel 109 cover (Mi123 cover) (Brown printed) cachet on cover 1957
Israel None Medallion ?
Israel P49 1000 sheqalim (banknote) 1983 850th anniv. birth
Israel None (Espana 84) show card no.6 1984 Contains reproduction of Israel 74
Israel P51A 1 new sheqel (banknote), also back 1986 (850th anniv. birth)
Israel 1114 (Mi?) In (upper-right) margin of MS3 (a-c) 1992
Israel None (Grenada 92) show card no.29 1992 Contains Israel 1114 and reproduction of Israel 74
Israel 1604+tab (Mi?+tab) Stamp and tab from MS6 (1604a (6x 1604)) 2005 (800th anniv. death)
Israel 1604 maxi1 Maxicard
Israel 1604 maxi2 Maxicard (different)
Israel 1604a fdc MS6 and cancel and cachet on FDC
Israel None fdc1 automat stamp on FDC 2005 (800th anniv. death)
Israel None fdc2 automat stamp on FDC (different)
Israel P51A + stamps 1 new sheqel (banknote) pair with stamps and cancels 2005 (800th anniv. death)
Lesotho 495 (Mi?) 1985 (850th anniv. birth)
Micronesia 355k (Mi851) One stamp and in (left) margin of MS17 (355 (a-q + label)) (Mi841-857) 1999 "1135: Birth of Jewish philosopher Moses Maimonides"
Mozambique Unknown ss (BL?) SS1 2009
Paraguay C629 (BL424) On stamp of SS1 1985 850th anniv. birth
Portugal 2658 (Mi?) 2004 Mishnah Tora of Maimonides
St. Vincent 3454a (Mi?) From vertical pair (3454 (a-b)); note the yellow frame on 'a' and yellow and black frame on 'b' 2005 800th anniv. death
St. Vincent 3454b (Mi?)
St. Vincent 3454c (BL?) MS4 (2x (3454 (a-b)))
Sierra Leone 743 (Mi?) 1985 (850th anniv. birth)
Sierra Leone 2789 (Mi?) 2005 800th anniv. death
Sierra Leone 2789a (Mi?) MS4 (4x 2789)
Spain 1462 fdc Cachet on FDC 1967
Spain 1463 (Mi?)
Spain 1461+1463 fdc One of two stamps and cachet on FDC
Spain 2872 (Mi?) 1996 Maimonides memorial in Cordoba
Uruguay 2078 (Mi?) 2004 (800th anniv. death)
Uruguay 2078 fdc Stamp and cancel and cachet on FDC


Magnus

Magnus, St. Albertus
(1193? - 1280)

St. Albertus Magnus was a Dominican scientist and philosopher. He has been called the "Doctor Universalis" in recognition of his vast learning. His writings on the natural sciences include physics, meteorology, geology, physiology, and plant and animal life. He was one of the primary transmitters of Greek philosophy, and in particular commented on and taught the texts of Aristotle in Paris through the translations of Averroes.

Magnus was the first to propose the idea that each drop of falling rain had the form of a small sphere, and that this form meant that the rainbow was produced by light interacting with each raindrop. However, he thought that the colors were produced somehow within the curtain of drops, by the unknown effects of some kind of layering.

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Antigua and Barbuda 2385 (Mi3233-3249) In (left) margin of MS17 (2385 (a-q + label)) 2000 "1274: Thomas Aquinas (Naples, 1225), the greatest of the Scholastics, [was] influenced by Albertus Magnus; and Maimonides enlightens European theology with Aristotle's ideas"
Barbuda Unknown (Mi unlisted) In (left) margin of MS17 (a-q + label), Antigua and Barbuda 2385 overprinted 2000 "1274: Thomas Aquinas (Naples, 1225), the greatest of the Scholastics, [was] influenced by Albertus Magnus; and Maimonides enlightens European theology with Aristotle's ideas"
Belgium 713 (Mi?)
i713

Imperforate
1969
Germany None Cinderella (poster stamp) pre-WWI (700th anniv. death)
Germany (West) 824 (Mi?) 1961
Germany (West) 1328 (Mi1049) 1980
Germany (West) 1328 black Blackprint
Germany (West) 1328 fdc1 Stamp and (?) cachet on FDC
Germany (West) 1328 fdc2 Stamp(s) and (Fleetwood) cachet on FDC, also back
Germany (West) 1328-1329 fdc1 One of two stamps and cachet on FDC
Germany (West) 1328-1329 fdc2 One of two stamps and cachet (different) on FDC
Germany (West) 1328-1329 sc Souvenir card
Germany (West) 1328-1329 black sc Blackprint souvenir card
Spain 3476 maxi (Mi? maxi) Cachet (only) on maxicard 2007 "Sant Albert"
Vatican City 677 (Mi?) 1980 (700th anniv. death)
Vatican City 678 (Mi?)
Vatican City 677-678 fdc1 Two stamps and (Tre Stelle) cachet on FDC
Vatican City 677-678 fdc2 Two stamps and (?) cachet on FDC


Khan

Khan, Kublai
(1215 - 1294)

Kublai Khan was a Mongol leader who according to Marco Polo maintained some 5000 court astrologers, whose duties included the hazardous task of weather prediction. Why so many? Guessing wrong, he explained, could lead to "early retirement".

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Antigua and Barbuda 2385o (Mi3247) One stamp and in (left) margin1, (left) margin2, (left) margin3, and (left) margin4 of MS17 (2385 (a-q + label)) (Mi3233-3249) 2000 "Kublai Khan" (in four left margin references) including "1294: Kublai Khan dies. Grandson of Genghis Khan, he was a brilliant statesman, the last great emperor of the Mongol dynasty that completed the unification of China"
Barbuda Unknown o (Mi unlisted) One stamp and in (left) margin1, (left) margin2, (left) margin3, and (left) margin4 of MS17 (a-q + label), Antigua and Barbuda 2385o overprinted 2000 "Kublai Khan" (in four left margin references) including "1294: Kublai Khan dies. Grandson of Genghis Khan, he was a brilliant statesman, the last great emperor of the Mongol dynasty that completed the unification of China"
Grenada Carriacou 2229c (Mi?) One of MS6 (2229 (a-f)) 2000 "Queen of Kublai Khan"
Guinea-Bissau BL851 SS1 2010 "Khubilai Khan" / "Kubilai Khan"
Liberia 1341 (Mi?) 1998
Mali Unknown ms (Mi none) MS2 (a-b) [known illegal issue] 2010
Mongolia 2740 (Mi?) MS2 (2740 (a-b)) 2012
Mongolia Mi3948 2015 "The 800th birth anniversary of Khubilai Khaan"
Mongolia Mi3949
Mongolia Mi3950
Mongolia Mi3951
Mongolia BL425 SS1
Mongolia 2985 (BL464) In (upper-left) margin of SS1 2021
Sierra Leone 2316 (BL?) SS1 2000


Aquinas

Aquinas, St. Thomas
(1225 - 1274)

St. Thomas Aquinas was a philosopher and theologian from the Kingdom of Naples. In his Summa Theologica, Aquinas wrote about the diabolical origin of storms: "Rains and winds, and whatsoever occurs by local impulse alone, can be caused by demon It is a dogma of faith that the demons can produce wind, storms, and a rain of fire from heaven". Aquinas also wrote that bells, "provided they have been duly consecrated and baptised, are the foremost means of frustrating the atmospheric mischiefs of the devil, for the tones of the consecrated metal repel the demons and avert storm and lightning".

Country Catalog Number Type of Item Year of Issue Notes on Content
Andorra (French Admin.) 303 (Mi?) 1982
Antigua and Barbuda 2385h (Mi3240) One stamp and in (left) margin of MS17 (2385 (a-q + label)) (Mi3233-3249) 2000 "1274: Thomas Aquinas (Naples, 1225), the greatest of the Scholastics, [was] influenced by Albertus Magnus; and Maimonides enlightens European theology with Aristotle's ideas"; (725th anniv. death, in 1999)
Barbuda Unknown h (Mi unlisted) One stamp and in (left) margin of MS17 (a-q + label), Antigua and Barbuda 2385h overprinted 2000 "1274: Thomas Aquinas (Naples, 1225), the greatest of the Scholastics, [was] influenced by Albertus Magnus; and Maimonides enlightens European theology with Aristotle's ideas"; (725th anniv. death, in 1999)
Belgium B119 (Mi338) 1932 bust of Aquinas (at right) and Cardinal Mercier
Belgium B121 (Mi340)
Bhutan 1318 (Mi?) MS4 (1318a (4x 1318)) 2000 (725th anniv. death, in 1999)
Germany (West) 1134 (Mi?) 1974 (700th anniv. death)
Germany (West) 1134 fdc Stamp and cachet on FDC
Italy None Cinderella (poster stamp) ~1923 600th anniv. canonization, 1323
Italy 1164 (Mi?) 1974 (700th anniv. death)
Sierra Leone 1487A (Mi?)
i1487A

Imperforate
1992 Aquinas' visit to St. Bonaventure
Vatican City 557a (Mi?) Strip of 3 (555-557) 1974 (700th anniv. death)
Vatican City 555 maxi Maxicard
Vatican City 556 maxi Maxicard


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