CASSIOPEIA, in astronomy, one of the constellations of the northern hemisphere, situated next to Cepheus. In 1572, there appeared a new star in this constellation, which at first surpassed in magnitude and brightness Jupiter himself; but it diminished by degrees, and at last disappeared, at the end of eighteen months. It alarmed all the astronomers of that age, many of whom wrote dissertations on it; among the rest Tycho Brahe, Kepler, Maurolycus, Lyceus, Gramineus, &c. Beza, the landgrave of Hesse, Rosa, &c. wrote to prove it a comet, and the same which appeared to the Magi at the
the birth of Jesus Christ, and that it came to declare his second coming: they were answered on this subject by Tycho. The stars in the constellation Cassiopeia in Ptolemy's Catalogue, are thirteen; in Hevelius's thirty-seven; in Tycho's, forty-six; but in the Britannic Catalogue, Mr Flamstead makes them fifty-five.