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    ESA > About Us > Welcome to ESA > ESA history

    A history of the European Space Agency

    The beginnings
    The beginnings

    "Europe's history of excellence in space is one of the most visible achievements of European cooperation in science and technology that started some 35 years ago," says Prof. Reimar Lüst, in his introduction to the History of the European Space Agency, now available on CD-ROM.

    These two volumes are the culmination of over a decade of work, an initiative by three professional historians of science to write an independent academic history of ESA and its predecessor organisations: ESRO and ELDO.

    The pioneers of ESA

    Since its feasibility study in 1990, the History project has produced more than 20 reports in a dedicated ESA History Report series, and there have been a number of presentations, seminars and publications in specialised literature.

    The project has been led by Prof. John Krige and Profs. Arturuo Russo (Univ. Palermo) and Michelangelo de Maria (Univ. Rome). The latter left the project in 1993 and his tasks were continued by Dr Lorenza Sebesta (Univ. Bologna). Their work supported by an eminent advisory committee of ESA pioneers, including Reimar Lüst, Michel Bignier, Peter Creola, George van Reeth) and outstanding European historians.


    ESA Convention May 1975

    The project traces the history of the European collaborative space programme from its beginnings in the late 1950s to the creation of a single space agency in the early 1970s and up to recent developments, in the light of its main actors and policies.

    "It provides valuable insights into the complex decision making processes in a unique multinational organisation which often involves a delicate balancing act between the various interests of its Member States," explained Antonio Rodota, ESA Director-General from 1997 to 2003.

    ESRO-1 under test in ESTEC 1967

    Volume 1 covers ESA’s predecessors, the European Space Research Organisation (ESRO), and the European Launcher Development Organisation (ELDO). It describes the period from the birth of ESRO and ELDO in the early 1960s, up to 1973 when the new organisation ESA was born and the programmatic basis for the new agency was laid with the adoption of the so-called Second Package Deal.

    This arrangement, and the First Package Deal of 1971, allowed for a mandatory scientific programme to be supplemented by optional application programmes in various fields, as well as two major undertakings, the Ariane launcher and Spacelab, a scientific laboratory to be carried on board NASA’s Space Shuttle.

    ESA's Ulf Merbold on Spacelab-1
    ESA's Ulf Merbold on Spacelab-1

    Volume 2 covers the history of ESA itself, from its birth in 1973 to 1987, when the the Ministerial Conference in the Hague approved a highly ambitious space programme to carry the European space effort into the new millenium. It thus deals with the implementation of a palette of programmes in space science and applications, as well as the Ariane and Spacelab programmes adopted by Ministers in the First and Second Package Deals in 1971 and 1973 respectively.

    These works are mainly based on the ESRO, ELDO and ESA archives housed at the Historical Archives of the European Community at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy. By concentrating on this vast collection of documents, freely available for scholarly research, the authors were able to describe in detail the decision-making processes at the intergovernmental level which underpinned the formulation and evolution of the programmes in ESRO, ELDO and ESA. For more recent documents (from 1983 onwards), the authors were given unrestricted access to the archives at ESA Headquarters in Paris.

    Europe's access to space
    Europe's access to space

    "Building on the lessons learned from ESRO and ELDO, ESA has become an outstandingly successful model of European scientific and technical collaboration. Its contribution to the development of a collective European space capability has been fundamental. The Agency has played an important role not only in space but also in uniting Europe," said Antonio Rodota.

    How to order

    History of the European Space Agency is available in two volumes (ESA SP-1235) or on CD-ROM and can be ordered from ESA Publications (price €75)

    Advisory Committee to the ESA History Study

    Prof. Dr R. Lüst Max-Planck Institut, Hamburg, Chairman
    Mr M. Bignier Paris
    Dr P. Creola Swiss Space Office, Bern
    Prof. P. Galluzzi Director, Inst. & Museum of the History of Science, Florence
    Prof. G. Gambetta University of Bologna
    Prof. R. Griffiths European University Institute, Florence
    Prof. S. Lindqvist Nobel Foundation, Stockholm
    M. D. Pestre Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris
    Dr W. Rathjen Deutsches Museum, Munich
    Dr G. Van Reeth Gaiole in Chiante, Italy
    Mr K-E Reuter ESA, Paris, Secretary

    Further information on the ESA History project

    Johann Oberlechner
    ESA Headquarters
    8-10 rue Mario Nikis
    Paris F-757538
    France

    Email: johann.oberlechner @ esa.int

    Last update: 3 September 2010

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