The manuscript was in the library of
Peterhouse, Cambridge by 1538, and probably by 1472. Although the 19th-century manuscript catalogue stated that the manuscript contained "directions for making an astrolabe (?)", Price identified the instrument as a planetary
equatorium. He argued that the manuscript was authored by, and written in the hand of, Geoffrey Chaucer. This was a controversial claim, and was treated with some scepticism by Chaucer scholars, though it received influential backing from the historian of astronomy
John North. The manuscript was shown to be in the hand of
John Westwyk by Kari Anne Rand in 2014. Further evidence for Westwyk's authorship was revealed by
Seb Falk in a book published in 2020.
Debate Price published an abstract in 1953, and the whole text (facsimile, transcription, and studies of the manuscript) in 1955. He maintained the possibility that Chaucer authored the
Equatorie, possibly as the missing part of his
A Treatise on the Astrolabe, which describes the
astrolabe; the
Equatorie makes direct reference to it. He argued that the manuscript was a
holograph draft, written in the hand of its author, as shown by the many additions and corrections in the manuscript. Price offered five points as indicators of Chaucer's authorship: • Style and scientific treatment of the material are similar to
A Treatise on the Astrolabe; • The text mentions that the year 1392 is the "Radix" (or "root") of Chaucer; • The main hand (including that of the "Radix" note) resembled, Price thought, a document likely written in Chaucer's hand; • Linguistic similarities between the
Equatorie and Chaucer's work, including "verbal echoes of the
Astrolabe; • The author is influenced by Merton's school of astronomy but lives in London, and the writing is that of an amateur, not a professional astronomer; in addition, the writer is familiar with "the diplomatic cipher methods of his time"—all elements that correspond with Chaucer's biography. Following the publication of the facsimile and transcription, G. Herdan published an article in which he concluded, based upon the percentage of words in the
Equatorie of "Romance vocabulary" (which includes words from
Old French,
Anglo-Norman French, and
Latin), that Chaucer was indeed the author: "The agreement between observation and expectation, or between fact and theory, is so striking that without going further into the question of statistical significance we may conclude that by the token of Romance vocabulary the
Equatorie is to be regarded as a work by Chaucer". However, Price's arguments were challenged in various ways. His claim that the manuscript was a draft in the hand of its author was disputed, though ultimately the evidence does seem to support it. More significantly, Price's claim that the handwriting was that of Geoffrey Chaucer was disproved by analysis by Kari Anne Rand Schmidt. In 2014
Kari Anne Rand identified the hand as belonging to
John Westwyk. ==Content==