Category
page 1Astrological texts
Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry
illuminated manuscript book of hours
The City of the Sun
1623 book by Tommaso Campanella
Dresden Codex
Pre-columbian Maya astronomic manuscript from Chichen Itza, Mexico
Sefer Yetzirah
Kabbalistic book about the creation of the universe
Alfonsine Tables
medieval astronomical work
Harmonices Mundi
book by Johannes Kepler
Chilam Balam
literary work
Mysterium Cosmographicum
1597 astronomy book by Johannes Kepler
Rudolphine Tables
astronomical data
Codex Borbonicus
Aztec codex

MUL.APIN
thumb|One of the two clay tablets on which the text is written. This exemplar shows that the tablet is unusually huge (as large as a sheet of paper) and the text is written in two columns.
On the Heavens
work by Aristotle
Madrid Codex
Maya manuscript from western Yucatán, Mexico
Sefer Raziel HaMalakh
Kabbalah book and grimoire of the orthodox ashkenazi judaism
Tetrabiblos
thumb|Quadripartitum, 1622

Āryabhaṭīya
thumb|
Reference of Kuttaka in Aryabhatiya

Hermetica
The Hermetica are texts attributed to the legendary Hellenistic figure Hermes Trismegistus, a syncretic combination of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god Thoth. These texts may vary widely in content and purpose, but by modern convention are usually subdivided into two main categories, the "technical" and "religio-philosophical" Hermetica.
Enuma anu enlil
Babylonian astrology tablets

Bansenshukai
300px|thumb|Bansenshukai
Bansenshūkai (, Ten Thousand Rivers Flowing Together to form an Ocean) (Also pronounced Mansenshukai) is a 1676 Japanese book containing a collection of knowledge from the clans in the Iga and Kōga, The book was compiled by Fujibayashi Yasutake (descendant of Fujibayashi Nagato-no-kami) in 1676, in the early years of the Tokugawa shogunate.
Astronomica
1st century AD Latin didactic poem about celestial phenomena written by Marcus Manilius
Maya codices
Maya manuscripts
Poor Richard's Almanack
18th-century American almanac
Toledan Tables
medieval astronomical tables
Book of Wonders
14th and 15th century Arabic manuscript
Codex Ríos
manuscript
Prutenic Tables
astronomical calculations
Three Books of Occult Philosophy
book by Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim
De sphaera mundi
book by Sacrobosco
A Treatise on the Astrolabe
medieval instruction manual on the astrolabe by Geoffrey Chaucer
Tonalamatl
right|400px|thumb|The original page 13 of the Codex Borbonicus, showing the 13th trecena of the Aztec sacred calendar. This 13th trecena was under the auspices of the goddess [[Tlazolteotl, who is shown on the upper left wearing a flayed skin, giving birth to Cinteotl. The 13 day-signs of this trecena, starting with 1 Earthquake, 2 Flint/Knife, 3 Rain, etc., are shown on the bottom row and the left column.]]
Treatise on Astrology of the Kaiyuan Era
Chinese astrology encyclopedia
Libros del saber de astronomía
medieval encyclopedia of astronomy
Divination by Astrological and Meteorological Phenomena
ancient Chinese astronomy manuscript
Book of the Zodiac
Mandaean religious text
Centiloquium
thumb|Interlinear Greek–Latin text from a 15th-century manuscript
thumb|Start of the Arabic text
thumb|Hugo of Santalla's Latin translation of Ahmad ibn Yusuf's commentary
The Centiloquium ("one hundred sayings") is a Pseudo-Ptolemaic collection of one hundred aphorisms about astrology and astrological rules. It is first recorded at the start of the tenth century CE, when a commentary was written on it by the Egyptian mathematician Ahmad ibn Yusuf al-Misri (later sometimes confounded with his namesake Ali ibn Ridwan ibn Ali ibn Ja'far al-Misri, who lived a century later and wrote a commentary
John of Saxony
astronomer
Q135946569
14th-century illuminated astrological manuscript (Sloane 3983)
Da Liu Ren
200px|right|The Da Liu Ren array, with the Three Transmissions on top, the Four Classes, their Heaven and Earth pan positions, the twelve generals, and the Heaven Pan superimposed above the Earth pan. Vacancies are noted in the right margin, along with the Date and the Ju number.
200px|right|The fixed, unmoving Earth Pan positions of the twelve Earth Branches. The Heaven Pan sprits rotate around the Earth pan.