| Thomas Maurice - India - 1806 - 402 pages
...wliich their astronomical time is dated.* On an actual retrospective survey of the heavens, it appears that Jupiter and Mercury were then in the same degree of the ecliptic; that Mars was distant about eight degrees, and Saturn seventeen ; and it results from that survey, that, at the time of * Le Gentil,... | |
| Har Bilas Sarda (Diwan Bahadur) - Hindus - 1906 - 506 pages
...a conjunction of the planets then took place, and their tables show this conjunction. Bailly states that Jupiter and Mercury were then in the same degree of the ecliptic, Mars at a distance of only eight, and Saturn of seven degrees ; whence it follows, that at the point... | |
| Abinas Chandra Das - Aryans - 1921 - 664 pages
...that a conjunction of planets then took place, and their tables show this conjunction. Bailly states that Jupiter and Mercury were then in the same degree of the ecliptic, Mars at a distance of only eight, and Saturn of seven degrees ; whence it follows that at the point... | |
| Robert Bolton - Religion - 2001 - 290 pages
...planets, and their tables show that conjunction. Monsieur Bailly observes that by calculation it appears that Jupiter and Mercury were then in the same degree...successively disengage themselves from the rays of the sun 5 According to Aryabhata the observations were made at Ujjain in central India, when there was also... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - India - 1910 - 738 pages
...that a conjunction of planets then took place, and their tables shew this conjunction. Bailly states that Jupiter and Mercury were then in the same degree of the ecliptic ; Mars at a distance of only eight, and Saturn of seven degrees ; whence it follows that at the point... | |
| |