The Alfonsine tables (also sometimes spelled Alphonsine tables) were astronomical tables drawn up at Toledo by order of Alfonso X around 1252 to 1270 to correct the anomalies in the Tables of Toledo; they divided the year into 365 days, 5 hours, 49 minutes, 16 seconds. They were originally written in Castilliancitation needed and later translated into Latin. Georg Purbach used the Alfonsine tables for his astronomy book Theoricae novae planetarum.