000K utf8 1100 $c2024 1500 eng 2050 urn:nbn:de:gbv:27-dbt-62149-8 2051 10.1177/00218286241238731 3000 Neuhäuser, Ralph 3010 Neuhäuser, Dagmar L. 4000 Occultation records in the Royal Frankish Annals for A.D. 807: Knowledge transfer from Arabia to Frankia? [Neuhäuser, Ralph] 4060 32 Seiten 4209 The Royal Frankish Annals (RFA) report under A.D. 807 three lunar and one solar eclipse (complete and dated correctly), a lunar occultation of Jupiter, and “a small spot” on the Sun interpreted as Mercury transit. This transmission is embedded between texts on the landing of diplomatic delegates from Baghdad and Jerusalem in Venice and on their meeting with Charlemagne. Technology transfer is explicitly mentioned (a mechanical water clock). The interpretation of a spot on the Sun as planetary transit is attested in Arabic reports since A.D. 840. The Jupiter occultation by the Moon is dated “Luna 17,” correctly counted in Muslim calendar practice since the first crescent detection. Eclipse predictions and records by astronomers from the c Abbasid caliphate using Ptolemy’s Almagest are extant from the early ninth century. There are time-spans of 6  months each between the three reported lunar eclipses (806 Sep 1/2, 807 Feb 25/26, Aug 21/22), a period of possible repetition given in the Almagest , but not known to the Carolingians. The 6-month rule for lunar eclipses might be preserved in the Carolingian Seven Book Computus. We present multiple evidence that visitors from Baghdad brought new insight and fostered the Carolingian progress in astronomy. 4950 https://doi.org/10.1177/00218286241238731$xR$3Volltext$534 4950 https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:27-dbt-62149-8$xR$3Volltext$534 4961 https://www.db-thueringen.de/receive/dbt_mods_00062149 5051 520 5550 Almagest 5550 Arabic astronomy 5550 Carolingian astronomy 5550 computus 5550 historical sunspots 5550 knowledge transfer 5550 Royal Frankish Annals 807 5550 solar and lunar eclipses