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Astronomy (Civ5)

Astronomy
Tech astronomy.png

Technology of the renaissance era

Cost 650 20xScience5.png
Required techs Compass, Education
Leads to Navigation
Units enabled Caravel
Turtle ship
Buildings enabled Observatory
Notes
  • Faster embarked movement
  • Embarking across oceans
"Joyfully to the breeze royal Odysseus spread his sail, and with his rudder skillfully he steered."
–Homer


This excerpt is from the Civ 5 guide:

With this technology you've opened the seas of the world. Your new ship type, the Caravel, can travel in coastal waters and deep ocean without trouble. They're also one of the fastest ships in the water, even in future Eras.

Use Caravels as scouts; they aren't hard hitting by any stretch of the imagination. That said, they can still escort embarked units to ensure that they aren't taken out by barbarian Galleys.

Observatories are Science buildings that can only be built when a city is founded next to a mountain. Observatories are slightly more efficient than Universities, so if you only have the money or time for one, they're better to choose. When you have more cash to spare, get both for an even stronger Science yield.

Embarked units gain the ability to enter deep ocean now that you understand Astronomy. All land units travel faster on the water than they did before, though they're still vulnerable to attack. Escort your units carefully!


Historical Info:Edit

Astronomy is the study of objects in space - from space dust to asteroids to moons, planets, stars, and galaxies - as well as other more esoteric objects like black holes and wormholes. Astronomy is the oldest of the natural sciences, with its roots in the religious and astrological practices of pre-history.

Much of early astronomy is related to religion. Stars and other celestial objects were associated with gods, and it was believed that they had direct control over man and his physical universe. A certain star or cluster of stars might appear each year around harvest time, and eventually ancient man might decide that the star is the home of the god governing the harvest. Perhaps if one sacrifices a goat on the day that the star first appears, that god would bless the upcoming harvest. This kind of thinking lies at the root of ancient astronomical studies as well as ancient calendar-making, with which astronomy has been historically allayed.

During the Renaissance astronomy shed much of its religious, astronomical trappings, becoming a pure science in its own right. In 1543 Nicolai Copernicus published "De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium," which postulated that the sun was at the center of the universe, not the earth, and that the planets orbited the sun, and the moon orbited the earth. In addition to the triumph of scientific research over dogma, Copernicus' book also argued that the use of mathematics would greatly help mankind to understand the world around him. Although this work was deeply controversial in his day, today Copernicus is acknowledged as one of the great scientists of history, and one of the fathers of the Scientific Revolution.

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