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Christoph Scheiner

Christoph Scheiner SJ (25 July 1573 (or 1575) – 18 June 1650) was a Jesuit priest, physicist and astronomer in Ingolstadt.

Oil on canvas portrait of Christoph Scheiner.

Biography

Augsburg/Dillingen: 1591–1605

Scheiner was born in Markt Wald near Mindelheim in Swabia, earlier markgravate Burgau, possession of the House of Habsburg. He attended the Jesuit St. Salvator Grammar School in Augsburg from May 1591 until 24 October 1595. He graduated as a "rhetor" and entered the Jesuit Order in Landsberg am Lech on 26 October 1595. At the local seminary, he served his biennial novitiate (1595–1597) under the tutelage of Novice Master Father Rupert Reindl SJ. From 1597 to 1598, he finished his lower studies of rhetoric in Augsburg. He took his first vows before Father Melchior Stör, SJ and received the minor orders from the Augsburg suffragan bishop Sebastian Breuning. He spent the years 1598–1601 in Ingolstadt studying philosophy (metaphysics and mathematics). In 1603, Scheiner invented the pantograph,[1] an instrument which could duplicate plans and drawings to an adjustable scale. From 1603 to 1605 he taught humanities: his years as a Latin teacher at the Jesuit grammar school in Dillingen earned him the title of Magister Artium.

 
Pantograph

Ingolstadt: 1605–1617

From the autumn of 1605 until 1609, Scheiner studied theology in Ingolstadt. Due to his invention of the pantograph, he had already gained celebrity status. Duke William V of Bavaria even invited him to Munich to demonstrate the instrument.

On 14 March 1609, he entered Holy Orders as a Deacon. He was ordained by suffragan bishop Marcus Lyresius. Scheiner finished his studies on 30 June 1609 with his first work, Theses Theologicae and with a disputation (PhD in theology). On 18 April 1609, he received his major orders from suffragan bishop Lyresius in Eichstätt, from where he went to Ebersberg to serve his tertianship with Father Johannes Pelecius S.J. In the years between 1610 and 1616/1617, Scheiner worked as a successor to Father Johannes Lantz S.J. in Ingolstadt, teaching mathematics (physics and astronomy) and Hebrew. He lectured on sun dials, practical geometry, astronomy, optics, and the telescope.

In 1611, Scheiner observed sunspots; in 1612 he published the "Apelles letters" in Augsburg. Mark Welser had the first three Apelles letters printed in Augsburg on 5 January 1612. They provided one of many reasons for the subsequent unpleasant argument between Scheiner and Galileo Galilei, which began when Galileo responded to the Apelles letters with his own Letters on Sunspots. Scheiner published in 1614 the Disquisitiones mathematicae in Ingolstadt with Johann Georg Locher, in 1615 Sol ellipticus in Augsburg and with Georg Schönberger Exegeses fundamentorum gnomonicorum in Ingolstadt, and in 1617 he published Refractiones coelestes, also in Ingolstadt. Scheiner took his remaining vows of poverty, chastity, obedience and loyalty before the Pope on 31 July 1617 in the town of Ingolstadt under Father Johannes Manhart S.J. In the very same year Scheiner made known his wish to go to China as a missionary. Father General Mutio Vitelleschi sent him a letter, however, telling Scheiner he had better stay in Europe and persevere with his mathematical studies. In the winter of 1617/1618, Scheiner returned to Innsbruck, Austria at the behest of Archduke Maximilian III.

Innsbruck/Freiburg/Neisse: 1617–1624

After November 1614, Archduke Maximilian III summoned Scheiner to Innsbruck several times to discuss astronomical and mathematical questions. The Archduke had received an astronomical telescope with two convex lenses which showed objects upside down and the wrong way round. Scheiner added a third lens, thus manufacturing a terrestrial telescope which allowed Maximilian to see the beautiful stretches of his country while standing upright. A portable camera obscura was developed by Scheiner in Innsbruck. Furthermore, a walkable camera obscura was constructed.

After the death of Maximilian III in 1618, Archduke Leopold V was appointed imperial representative of Tyrol and of the Upper Provinces. Like his predecessor Maximilian, Leopold V put his trust in Father Scheiner. Scheiner's "Oculus hoc est: Fundamentum opticum," containing many new insights into the physiological nature of the eye, was published in Innsbruck in 1619. The book had been written earlier in Ingolstadt. Oculus is subdivided into three parts: the first part treats the anatomy of the eye, the second part the refraction of the light ray inside the eye, and the third part deals with the retina and the visual angle. Scheiner once again chooses the way of observation and experiment. Like Kepler before him, he found that the retina is the seat of vision and that the optic nerve transmits the images from the retina to the brain. Scheiner was rebuked once more for going from Innsbruck to Hall in a heavily loaded coach drawn by six horses! Father General Vitelleschi wrote him a letter. Archduke Leopold V and Father Scheiner carried on a sizeable correspondence from 1620 until 1632. One of Scheiner's letters to Leopold from 1626 informs the Archduke that Galilei is not to hear of Scheiner's work concerning the sunspots.

The inventory of Leopold's library contains works by Tycho Brahe and Galileo Galilei: Leopold lead a friendly correspondence with Galilei. On 23 May 1618, Leopold received telescopes from Galilei, along with a treatise on the sunspots, the Discorso del Flusso e Reflusso del Mare.

Scheiner was the builder of the new Jesuit church in Innsbruck. Craftsmen began to work on the roof in July 1624, but September saw a sudden collapse of the middle part of the gallery and the sidewall facing the street. According to a new decision, the church had to be turned by 90° and be reconstructed.

Freiburg University was facing a decline at the beginning of the 17th century. It was on 16 November 1620, that Archduke Leopold summoned the Jesuit Fathers, first of all, the "most excellent by far" Christoph Scheiner. In the spring of 1621, Scheiner was recalled for reasons confirmed to be unknown: in fact it was Archduke Karl's wish to have Scheiner as his father confessor. Archduke Karl had travelled with Scheiner from Brixen to Vienna, from where he did not return to Neisse until sometime between 1621 and 1622. In February 1623, Scheiner was appointed Superior of the future college. Then the Spanish King Philipp IV chose Karl of Austria for the office of a vice-king of Portugal. Archduke Karl travelled to Madrid. Scheiner had to travel to Rome, to instigate the foundation of the new college in Neisse. Scheiner stayed in Rome longer than his duty required. In Rosa Ursina sive Sol, he wrote that he had been sent to Rome "ad summum pontificem, ob certa peragenda negotia" (Latin meaning "to the pontifical summons..."). Other theories, contending that Scheiner had been summoned to Rome as an expert astronomer because of Galilei, or that he felt his transfer to Neisse was a punishment, have not been confirmed. It was only 13 years later, that he returned to Neisse via Vienna, where he stayed for some time.

Rome: 1624–1633

 
A sunspot-instrument by Scheiner (printed between 1626–1630)

When Scheiner went to Rome in 1624, friends asked him to write about his solar observations. At last he had time for mathematical books, among them Galilei’s Il saggiatore, which contains Galileo's work on sunspots. This was similar to Scheiner's own work (unsurprisingly, since both were observing at the same time) but led to allegations from both of plagiarism by the other, and to a deep enmity between the two scientists. In 1629 and 1630, Scheiner observed a series of mock suns (parhelia) and haloes, including a complex display on 24 January 1630.[2] These were described in his book Parhelia, which had a profound influence on the work of René Descartes and later on Christiaan Huygens. His observations also included an eclipse on 8 April 1633. On 22 June 1633, Galilei received his sentence and had to renounce his claims, despite the protest sounding even from the Aristotelian side. Scheiner's influence on the trial cannot be proven. The trial files merely contain a small note mentioning that he had opposed the Copernicans. At the time of the trial, Scheiner was still in Rome, staying at the seminary for future priests.

 
Depiction of the sunspots

Scheiner wrote three of his books in Rome: Rosa Ursina sive Sol (Bracciano, 1626–1630), on sunspots, which served as a standard work for research work on the sunspots for a long time. Rosa Ursina sive Sol contains four books. In the first part, Scheiner discusses the question of priority of discovery in regard to sunspots. The second part not only describes telescopes, different kinds of projection and the helioscope but also compares the optics of the telescope to the physiological optics of the eye. In the third book, Scheiner presents a comprehensive collection of the data from his observation of sunspots. Book 4 consists of two parts: the first part deals once again with solar phenomena like sunspots and sun flares, the sun's rotation period of 27 days and the inclination of its axis of rotation. In the second part, Scheiner mentions numerous passages and quotations from the Bible, the writings of the Church Fathers and philosophers to prove that his geocentric view is in accordance with the teachings of the Catholic Church. Scheiner published Pantographice, about the pantograph which he had invented as early as 1603, and finally in 1632/1633, Scheiner published his last work Prodromus, a pamphlet against the heliocentric theory which was published posthumously in 1651.

Vienna: 1633–1637

Father General Mutio Vitelleschi wrote his first letter to Scheiner in Vienna on 21 January 1634. Thus Scheiner must have returned to Vienna between December 1633 and January 1634. Scheiner was unwilling to go back to Neisse. In Vienna, Scheiner was forced to confront the insecure funding for his book Rosa Ursina sive Sol.

Neisse: 1637–1650

After 15 November 1637, Scheiner was in Neisse in Silesia. Scheiner's activities in Neisse: Advisor, Councilor of the Rector, Mentor and Father Confessor to the students. He died there, and his obituary from 1650 maintains that Scheiner had to stay in Vienna because of the war, that he had had to flee from Neisse with all his astronomical instruments, that he usually got up early, to write or read, take care of the garden and plant trees with his own hands. The author of this obituary mentions Scheiner's modesty and chastity while pointing out that he was envied by many and "struggled with envy himself." Christoph Scheiner died on 18 June 1650 in Neisse (now Nysa, Poland).[1][3]

Works

 
Pantographice, 1631
 
Oculus, 1619
  • Tres epistolae de maculis solaribus (Augsburg, 1612)
  • De Maculis solaribus et stellis circa Iovis errantibus accuratior Disquisitio (Augsburg, 1612)
  • De maculis Solaribus (in Latin). Roma: Giacomo Mascardi (1.). 1613.
  • Disquisitiones mathematicae (Ingolstadt, 1614, zusammen mit Stefan Locher)
  • Sol ellipticus (Augsburg, 1615)
  • Exegeses fundamentorum gnomonicorum (Ingolstadt, 1617)
  • Refractiones coelestes sive solis elliptici phaenomenon illustratum (Ingolstadt, 1617)
  • Oculus, hoc est: Fundamentum opticum (Innsbruck, 1620) Gallica
  • Rosa Ursina sive Sol. (Bracciano, 1626–30)
  • Pantographice seu ars delineandi (Rom, 1631)
  • Prodromus pro sole mobili et terra stabili contra ... Galilaeum a Galileis (Prag, 1651)

Legacy

The primary school in Markt Wald is named in memory of Christoph Scheiner. In Markt Wald, there is also a street and a plaque hangs in the town hall and an observation tower to his remembrance. In Ingolstadt, there is the Christoph-Scheiner-Gymnasium (a High School). The street to the observatory of the university in Munich and a road in Berlin (Charlottenburg) are named after Scheiner. In 1999, a coin (35-mm diameter), with Scheiner's face on it, was minted in Ingolstadt. Also a lunar crater is named after Scheiner (diameter: 110 km [68 mi], height of embankment: 5,500 m [18,000 ft], named by Riccoli). A postage stamp was issued in Austria (2005). The town museum in Ingolstadt shows an oil painting (after 1732), also the Studienbibliothek Dillingen a fresco (painter Ignaz Schilling, 1702–1773).

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Lake County Astronomical Society NightTimes" (Scheiner bio), Jay Bitterman, July 2002, webpage: . Archived from the original on 10 November 2006. Retrieved 25 April 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^ The Seven Suns of Rome Nature, 30 September 2011
  3. ^ "Scheiner, Christoph at the Galileo Project", Richard S. Westfall, 1995, webpage: The Galileo Project.

References

  • Archiv des Jesuitenkollegs, Innsbruck, Historia Domus; Nr. X, 1.
  • Archiv der Jesuiten in Neisse, Stadt Oppeln, Opole, Polen, Staatliches Archiv, Handschrift Sign. 6.
  • Archivum Monacense Societatis Jesu, Abt. 0 XI 43, MI 29; Mscr XVI 19/11; Mscr VI 16; C XV 23; C XV 21/2; C XII 2; Mscr XI 21.
  • Archivum Romanum Societatis Iesu, Rom, Epist. Gener., Jahreskatalog Boh. 91. Archivio Segreto Vaticano, Città del Vaticano, Miscellanea, Armadio X.
  • Archiv der Südpolnischen Provinz der Gesellschaft Jesu, Krakau, Nachrufe, Handschrift 2551. Bayerisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, München, Jesuiten 92, 498, Catalogus personarum 1601, PS 11082.
  • Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, München, Codex latinus Monacensis 1609, 1610, 9264, 11877, 12425.
  • Bibliothek der Erzabtei Pannonhalma OSB, Ungarn, Catalogi manuscriptorum ..., Jesuitica, 118. J. 1. Fürstlich und Gräfliches Fuggersches Familien- und Stiftungsarchiv, Dillingen, Urbare Irmatshofen 1568–1624.
  • Nationalbibliothek Prag, Clementinum, Catalogus personarum, Sign. Fb4.
  • Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Handschriftenabteilung, Codices 11961, 14214.
  • Pontificia Università Gregoriana di Roma, Biblioteca, Kircher, Misc. Epist. XIII, 567, 33r; XIV, 568, fol. 198r–199v.
  • Tiroler Landesarchiv, Kanzlei Ehz. Maximilian (Hofregistratur); Alphabetisches Leopoldinum, Reihe II/51; Leopoldinum; Kunstsachen; Handschriften 3481, 3484; Autogramme G.
  • Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum Innsbruck, Dip. 596/I; FB 2705, FB 51838.
  • Universitätsbibliothek München, Sign. 4 Philos. 309#28.
  • Universitätsbibliothek Graz, Ms. 159, 1, 2.

Literature

  • Biagioli, Mario; Picturing Objects in the Making: Scheiner, Galilei and the Discovery of Sunspots, in: Ideals and Cultures of Knowledge in Early Modern Europe, Detel and Zittel (Hg.), Berlin 2002, 39–95.
  • Casanovas, Juan; Early Observations of Sunspots: Scheiner and Galileo, in: 1st Advances in Solar Physics Euroconference, Advances in the Physics of Sunspots, ASP Conference Series 118, B. Schmieder, J. C. del Toro Iniesta, M. Vásquez (Hg.) (1997), 3–20.
  • Daly, Peter M.; Dimler, G. Richard & Haub Rita; Imago Figurata Studies, Vol. 3, Brepols Publishers, Turnhout 2000, 133–144.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Briefe Christoph Scheiners an Erzherzog Leopold V. von Österreich-Tirol von 1620–1632, in: Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt, 102/103, 1993/94, 401–404.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Briefe des Naturwissenschaftlers Christoph Scheiner, Erzherzog Leopold V. von Österreich-Tirol, 1620–1632, Innsbruck 1995.
  • Daxecker, Franz; The Physicist and Astronomer Christoph Scheiner: Biography, Letters, Works, Veröffentlichungen der Universität Innsbruck 246 (2004).
  • Daxecker, Franz; Die Disputatio des Astronomen Christoph Scheiner, Acta Historica Astronomiae 23, Beiträge zur Astronomiegeschichte 7 (2004), 99–144.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Scheiner, Christoph, Neue Deutsche Biographie 22, Berlin 2005, 638–648
  • Daxecker, Franz; Christoph Scheiners Weg zur Optik, in: Ingolstädter Heimatblätter 3, 54,1991, 9–12. Johannes Hemleben, Galilei, Reinbek 1991.
  • Daxecker Franz; Christoph Scheiners allgemeine Aussagen über Fernrohre, in: Die Jesuiten in Ingolstadt 1549–1773, Ingolstadt 1992, 140–143.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Christoph Scheiner's eye studies, in: Documenta Ophthalmologica 81, 1992, 27–35;
  • Daxecker, Franz; Christoph Scheiners Geburtsort und Geburtsjahr, Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 107, 1998, 118–122.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Christoph Scheiner und die Camera obscura, Acta Historica Astronomiae 28, Beiträge zur Astronomiegeschichte 8, 2006, 37–42.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Christoph Scheiners Untersuchungen zur physiologischen Optik des Auges, in: Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 102/103, 1993/1994, 385–399.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Das Hauptwerk des Astronomen P. Christoph Scheiner SJ "Rosa Ursina sive Sol" – eine Zusammenfassung, Ber. nat.-med. Verein, Innsbruck 1996, Suppl. 13.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Der Astronom P. Christoph Scheiner SJ als Bauleiter des ersten Jesuitenkirchen-Neubaues in Innsbruck, in: Tiroler Heimatblätter, 1996, 14–20.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Der Naturwissenschaftler Christoph Scheiner SJ in der optischen Literatur. Ein medizinhistorischer Beitrag, in: Ber. nat.-med. Verein Innsbruck 80, 1993, 411–420.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Der Physiker und Astronom Christoph Scheiner, Universitätsverlag Wagner, Innsbruck 2006.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Further studies by Christoph Scheiner concerning the optics of the eye, in: Documenta Ophthalmologica 86, 1994, 153–161.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Erzherzog Maximilian III., Erzherzog Leopold V. und die Astronomen Christoph Scheiner und Galileo Galilei, in: Tiroler Heimat 69, Innsbruck 2005, 7–16.
  • Daxecker, Franz & Subaric, Lav; Briefe der Generaloberen P. Claudio Aquaviva SJ, P. Mutio Vitelleschi SJ und P. Vincenco Carafa an den Astronomen P. Christoph Scheiner SJ von 1614 bis 1649, in: Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 111, 2002, 101–148.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Christoph Scheiner und die Optik des Auges, in: Sonne entdecken, Ingolstadt 2000, 43–45.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Lexikon für Theologie und Kirche 9, 2000, 120–121.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Christoph Scheiners Hauptwerk "Rosa Ursina sive Sol", in: Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 109, 2000, 43–57.
  • Daxecker, Franz & Lav Subaric; Christoph Scheiners "Sol ellipticus", Veröffentlichungen der Universität Innsbruck 226, Innsbruck 1998.
  • Daxecker, Franz; P. Christoph Scheiner und der Galilei-Prozeß, in: Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt, 108, Ingolstadt 1999, 111–112.
  • Daxecker, Franz; "Über das Fernrohr" und weitere Mitschriften von Vorlesungen Christoph Scheiners, in: Acta Historica Astronomiae 13, Beiträge zur Astronomiegeschichte 4, 2001, 19–32.
  • Daxecker Franz & Florian Schaffenrath; Ein Nachruf auf den Astronomen Christoph Scheiner aus dem Jahr 1650, in: Acta Historica Astronomiae 13, 2001, Beiträge zur Astronomiegeschichte 4, 33–45.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Frontispize in den Werken P. Christoph Scheiners SJ, in: Emblematik und Kunst der Jesuiten in Bayern: Einfluß und Wirkung, Peter M. Daly, G. Richard Dimler SJ, Rita Haub (Hg.), Imago Figurata Studies, Vol. 3, Brepols Publishers, Turnhout 2000, 133–144
  • Daxecker, Franz; Neue Dokumente zu Christoph Scheiner: Theses theologicae, Vorlesungsmitschriften und ein Nachruf aus dem Jahr 1650, in: Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 110, 2001, 143–147.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Schaffenrath, Florian; & Subaric, Lav; Briefe Christoph Scheiners von 1600 bis 1634, in: Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 110, 2001, 117–141.
  • Daxecker, Franz; Christoph Scheiners Lebensjahre zwischen 1633 und 1650, in: Acta Historica Astronomiae 15, Beiträge zur Astronomiegeschichte 5, 2002, 40–46;
  • Daxecker, Franz; Der Physiker und Astronom Christoph Scheiner. Universitätsverlag Wagner, Innsbruck 2006
  • Daxecker, Franz; Christoph Scheiner und der flüssige Himmel, in: Acta Historica Astronomiae 36, Beiträge zur Astronomiegeschichte 9, 2008, 26–36
  • Duhr, Bernhard; Geschichte der Jesuiten in den Ländern deutscher Zunge in der ersten Hälfte des XVII. Jahrhunderts, 4 Bde., Freiburg i. Br. 1907, 1913 (Bde. 1 u. 2) – München 1921, 1928 (Bde. 3 u. 4), 2/2, 227, 435–436.
  • Favaro, Antonio; Le Opere di Galileo Galilei, Edizione Nazionale, I-XX, Florence 1890–1909, Nachdruck Florenz 1968.
  • Frieß, Peter; Christoph Scheiner und die dritte Dimension in der Malerei, in: Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 109, 2000, 33–42.
  • Gassendi, Petri; Diniensis Ecclesiae Praepositi, et in Academia Parisiensi Matheseos Regii Professoris Opera Omnia in sex tomos divisa, Florence 1727, VI, 38, 42–43, 49, 50, 370–371, 376, 377, 382.
  • Goercke, Ernst; Christoph Scheiners Ausführungen über Glaslinsen und ein moderner Nachahmungsversuch, in: Die Sterne 66, 1990, 371–379.
  • Goercke, Ernst; Daxecker, Franz; & Glasgucker, Pater; in: Die Sterne 70, 1994, 286–289.
  • Gorman, Michael John; A Matter of Faith? Christoph Scheiner, Jesuit censorship and the Trial of Galileo, in: Perspectives on Science 4 (1996), 283–320.
  • Gorman, Michael John; The Scientific Counter-revolution. Mathematics, natural philosophy and experimentalism in Jesuit culture 1580–c.1670 [PhD thesis], European University Institute, Florenz 1998.
  • Granada, Miguel A.; Christoph Rothmann und die Auflösung der himmlischen Sphären. Die Briefe an den Landgrafen von Hessen-Kassel 1585, in: Beiträge zur Astronomiegeschichte 2, Acta Historica Astronomiae 5 (1999), 34–57.
  • Haub, Rita; Jesuitenkolleg Neisse, in: Sonne entdecken, Ingolstadt 2000, 20.
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  • Haub, Rita; Christoph Scheiner – der Mensch. Sein Leben als Jesuit und Naturwissenschafter, in: Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 109 (2000), 15–31.
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External links

  • Surveyor.in-berlin.de
  • Stadtmuseum Ingolstadt:Christoph Scheiner
  • Franz Daxecker (2003). "Scheiner, Christoph". In Bautz, Traugott (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 21. Nordhausen: Bautz. cols. 1307–1312. ISBN 3-88309-110-3.
  • Fairfield University: Christoph Scheiner
  • Peter Abrahams: Telescopes for solar research; from Scheiner's Helioscopium to De la Rue's Photoheliograph
  • Albert Van Helden: Christoph Scheiner
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Christopher Scheiner" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

christoph, scheiner, july, 1573, 1575, june, 1650, jesuit, priest, physicist, astronomer, ingolstadt, canvas, portrait, contents, biography, augsburg, dillingen, 1591, 1605, ingolstadt, 1605, 1617, innsbruck, freiburg, neisse, 1617, 1624, rome, 1624, 1633, vie. Christoph Scheiner SJ 25 July 1573 or 1575 18 June 1650 was a Jesuit priest physicist and astronomer in Ingolstadt Oil on canvas portrait of Christoph Scheiner Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Augsburg Dillingen 1591 1605 1 2 Ingolstadt 1605 1617 1 3 Innsbruck Freiburg Neisse 1617 1624 1 4 Rome 1624 1633 1 5 Vienna 1633 1637 1 6 Neisse 1637 1650 2 Works 3 Legacy 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Literature 8 External linksBiography EditAugsburg Dillingen 1591 1605 Edit Scheiner was born in Markt Wald near Mindelheim in Swabia earlier markgravate Burgau possession of the House of Habsburg He attended the Jesuit St Salvator Grammar School in Augsburg from May 1591 until 24 October 1595 He graduated as a rhetor and entered the Jesuit Order in Landsberg am Lech on 26 October 1595 At the local seminary he served his biennial novitiate 1595 1597 under the tutelage of Novice Master Father Rupert Reindl SJ From 1597 to 1598 he finished his lower studies of rhetoric in Augsburg He took his first vows before Father Melchior Stor SJ and received the minor orders from the Augsburg suffragan bishop Sebastian Breuning He spent the years 1598 1601 in Ingolstadt studying philosophy metaphysics and mathematics In 1603 Scheiner invented the pantograph 1 an instrument which could duplicate plans and drawings to an adjustable scale From 1603 to 1605 he taught humanities his years as a Latin teacher at the Jesuit grammar school in Dillingen earned him the title of Magister Artium Pantograph Ingolstadt 1605 1617 Edit From the autumn of 1605 until 1609 Scheiner studied theology in Ingolstadt Due to his invention of the pantograph he had already gained celebrity status Duke William V of Bavaria even invited him to Munich to demonstrate the instrument On 14 March 1609 he entered Holy Orders as a Deacon He was ordained by suffragan bishop Marcus Lyresius Scheiner finished his studies on 30 June 1609 with his first work Theses Theologicae and with a disputation PhD in theology On 18 April 1609 he received his major orders from suffragan bishop Lyresius in Eichstatt from where he went to Ebersberg to serve his tertianship with Father Johannes Pelecius S J In the years between 1610 and 1616 1617 Scheiner worked as a successor to Father Johannes Lantz S J in Ingolstadt teaching mathematics physics and astronomy and Hebrew He lectured on sun dials practical geometry astronomy optics and the telescope In 1611 Scheiner observed sunspots in 1612 he published the Apelles letters in Augsburg Mark Welser had the first three Apelles letters printed in Augsburg on 5 January 1612 They provided one of many reasons for the subsequent unpleasant argument between Scheiner and Galileo Galilei which began when Galileo responded to the Apelles letters with his own Letters on Sunspots Scheiner published in 1614 the Disquisitiones mathematicae in Ingolstadt with Johann Georg Locher in 1615 Sol ellipticus in Augsburg and with Georg Schonberger Exegeses fundamentorum gnomonicorum in Ingolstadt and in 1617 he published Refractiones coelestes also in Ingolstadt Scheiner took his remaining vows of poverty chastity obedience and loyalty before the Pope on 31 July 1617 in the town of Ingolstadt under Father Johannes Manhart S J In the very same year Scheiner made known his wish to go to China as a missionary Father General Mutio Vitelleschi sent him a letter however telling Scheiner he had better stay in Europe and persevere with his mathematical studies In the winter of 1617 1618 Scheiner returned to Innsbruck Austria at the behest of Archduke Maximilian III Innsbruck Freiburg Neisse 1617 1624 Edit After November 1614 Archduke Maximilian III summoned Scheiner to Innsbruck several times to discuss astronomical and mathematical questions The Archduke had received an astronomical telescope with two convex lenses which showed objects upside down and the wrong way round Scheiner added a third lens thus manufacturing a terrestrial telescope which allowed Maximilian to see the beautiful stretches of his country while standing upright A portable camera obscura was developed by Scheiner in Innsbruck Furthermore a walkable camera obscura was constructed After the death of Maximilian III in 1618 Archduke Leopold V was appointed imperial representative of Tyrol and of the Upper Provinces Like his predecessor Maximilian Leopold V put his trust in Father Scheiner Scheiner s Oculus hoc est Fundamentum opticum containing many new insights into the physiological nature of the eye was published in Innsbruck in 1619 The book had been written earlier in Ingolstadt Oculus is subdivided into three parts the first part treats the anatomy of the eye the second part the refraction of the light ray inside the eye and the third part deals with the retina and the visual angle Scheiner once again chooses the way of observation and experiment Like Kepler before him he found that the retina is the seat of vision and that the optic nerve transmits the images from the retina to the brain Scheiner was rebuked once more for going from Innsbruck to Hall in a heavily loaded coach drawn by six horses Father General Vitelleschi wrote him a letter Archduke Leopold V and Father Scheiner carried on a sizeable correspondence from 1620 until 1632 One of Scheiner s letters to Leopold from 1626 informs the Archduke that Galilei is not to hear of Scheiner s work concerning the sunspots The inventory of Leopold s library contains works by Tycho Brahe and Galileo Galilei Leopold lead a friendly correspondence with Galilei On 23 May 1618 Leopold received telescopes from Galilei along with a treatise on the sunspots the Discorso del Flusso e Reflusso del Mare Scheiner was the builder of the new Jesuit church in Innsbruck Craftsmen began to work on the roof in July 1624 but September saw a sudden collapse of the middle part of the gallery and the sidewall facing the street According to a new decision the church had to be turned by 90 and be reconstructed Freiburg University was facing a decline at the beginning of the 17th century It was on 16 November 1620 that Archduke Leopold summoned the Jesuit Fathers first of all the most excellent by far Christoph Scheiner In the spring of 1621 Scheiner was recalled for reasons confirmed to be unknown in fact it was Archduke Karl s wish to have Scheiner as his father confessor Archduke Karl had travelled with Scheiner from Brixen to Vienna from where he did not return to Neisse until sometime between 1621 and 1622 In February 1623 Scheiner was appointed Superior of the future college Then the Spanish King Philipp IV chose Karl of Austria for the office of a vice king of Portugal Archduke Karl travelled to Madrid Scheiner had to travel to Rome to instigate the foundation of the new college in Neisse Scheiner stayed in Rome longer than his duty required In Rosa Ursina sive Sol he wrote that he had been sent to Rome ad summum pontificem ob certa peragenda negotia Latin meaning to the pontifical summons Other theories contending that Scheiner had been summoned to Rome as an expert astronomer because of Galilei or that he felt his transfer to Neisse was a punishment have not been confirmed It was only 13 years later that he returned to Neisse via Vienna where he stayed for some time Rome 1624 1633 Edit A sunspot instrument by Scheiner printed between 1626 1630 When Scheiner went to Rome in 1624 friends asked him to write about his solar observations At last he had time for mathematical books among them Galilei s Il saggiatore which contains Galileo s work on sunspots This was similar to Scheiner s own work unsurprisingly since both were observing at the same time but led to allegations from both of plagiarism by the other and to a deep enmity between the two scientists In 1629 and 1630 Scheiner observed a series of mock suns parhelia and haloes including a complex display on 24 January 1630 2 These were described in his book Parhelia which had a profound influence on the work of Rene Descartes and later on Christiaan Huygens His observations also included an eclipse on 8 April 1633 On 22 June 1633 Galilei received his sentence and had to renounce his claims despite the protest sounding even from the Aristotelian side Scheiner s influence on the trial cannot be proven The trial files merely contain a small note mentioning that he had opposed the Copernicans At the time of the trial Scheiner was still in Rome staying at the seminary for future priests Depiction of the sunspots Scheiner wrote three of his books in Rome Rosa Ursina sive Sol Bracciano 1626 1630 on sunspots which served as a standard work for research work on the sunspots for a long time Rosa Ursina sive Sol contains four books In the first part Scheiner discusses the question of priority of discovery in regard to sunspots The second part not only describes telescopes different kinds of projection and the helioscope but also compares the optics of the telescope to the physiological optics of the eye In the third book Scheiner presents a comprehensive collection of the data from his observation of sunspots Book 4 consists of two parts the first part deals once again with solar phenomena like sunspots and sun flares the sun s rotation period of 27 days and the inclination of its axis of rotation In the second part Scheiner mentions numerous passages and quotations from the Bible the writings of the Church Fathers and philosophers to prove that his geocentric view is in accordance with the teachings of the Catholic Church Scheiner published Pantographice about the pantograph which he had invented as early as 1603 and finally in 1632 1633 Scheiner published his last work Prodromus a pamphlet against the heliocentric theory which was published posthumously in 1651 Vienna 1633 1637 Edit Father General Mutio Vitelleschi wrote his first letter to Scheiner in Vienna on 21 January 1634 Thus Scheiner must have returned to Vienna between December 1633 and January 1634 Scheiner was unwilling to go back to Neisse In Vienna Scheiner was forced to confront the insecure funding for his book Rosa Ursina sive Sol Neisse 1637 1650 Edit After 15 November 1637 Scheiner was in Neisse in Silesia Scheiner s activities in Neisse Advisor Councilor of the Rector Mentor and Father Confessor to the students He died there and his obituary from 1650 maintains that Scheiner had to stay in Vienna because of the war that he had had to flee from Neisse with all his astronomical instruments that he usually got up early to write or read take care of the garden and plant trees with his own hands The author of this obituary mentions Scheiner s modesty and chastity while pointing out that he was envied by many and struggled with envy himself Christoph Scheiner died on 18 June 1650 in Neisse now Nysa Poland 1 3 Works Edit Pantographice 1631 Oculus 1619 Tres epistolae de maculis solaribus Augsburg 1612 IMSS Digital Library De Maculis solaribus et stellis circa Iovis errantibus accuratior Disquisitio Augsburg 1612 IMSS Digital Library De maculis Solaribus in Latin Roma Giacomo Mascardi 1 1613 Disquisitiones mathematicae Ingolstadt 1614 zusammen mit Stefan Locher IMSS Digital Library Sol ellipticus Augsburg 1615 IMSS Digital Library Exegeses fundamentorum gnomonicorum Ingolstadt 1617 Refractiones coelestes sive solis elliptici phaenomenon illustratum Ingolstadt 1617 IMSS Digital Library Oculus hoc est Fundamentum opticum Innsbruck 1620 Gallica Rosa Ursina sive Sol Bracciano 1626 30 IMSS Digital Library Pantographice seu ars delineandi Rom 1631 IMSS Digital Library Prodromus pro sole mobili et terra stabili contra Galilaeum a Galileis Prag 1651 IMSS Digital LibraryLegacy EditThe primary school in Markt Wald is named in memory of Christoph Scheiner In Markt Wald there is also a street and a plaque hangs in the town hall and an observation tower to his remembrance In Ingolstadt there is the Christoph Scheiner Gymnasium a High School The street to the observatory of the university in Munich and a road in Berlin Charlottenburg are named after Scheiner In 1999 a coin 35 mm diameter with Scheiner s face on it was minted in Ingolstadt Also a lunar crater is named after Scheiner diameter 110 km 68 mi height of embankment 5 500 m 18 000 ft named by Riccoli A postage stamp was issued in Austria 2005 The town museum in Ingolstadt shows an oil painting after 1732 also the Studienbibliothek Dillingen a fresco painter Ignaz Schilling 1702 1773 See also EditList of Jesuit scientists List of Roman Catholic scientist clericsNotes Edit a b Lake County Astronomical Society NightTimes Scheiner bio Jay Bitterman July 2002 webpage Scheiner Biography by Jay Bitterman Archived from the original on 10 November 2006 Retrieved 25 April 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link The Seven Suns of Rome Nature 30 September 2011 Scheiner Christoph at the Galileo Project Richard S Westfall 1995 webpage The Galileo Project References EditArchiv des Jesuitenkollegs Innsbruck Historia Domus Nr X 1 Archiv der Jesuiten in Neisse Stadt Oppeln Opole Polen Staatliches Archiv Handschrift Sign 6 Archivum Monacense Societatis Jesu Abt 0 XI 43 MI 29 Mscr XVI 19 11 Mscr VI 16 C XV 23 C XV 21 2 C XII 2 Mscr XI 21 Archivum Romanum Societatis Iesu Rom Epist Gener Jahreskatalog Boh 91 Archivio Segreto Vaticano Citta del Vaticano Miscellanea Armadio X Archiv der Sudpolnischen Provinz der Gesellschaft Jesu Krakau Nachrufe Handschrift 2551 Bayerisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Munchen Jesuiten 92 498 Catalogus personarum 1601 PS 11082 Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Munchen Codex latinus Monacensis 1609 1610 9264 11877 12425 Bibliothek der Erzabtei Pannonhalma OSB Ungarn Catalogi manuscriptorum Jesuitica 118 J 1 Furstlich und Grafliches Fuggersches Familien und Stiftungsarchiv Dillingen Urbare Irmatshofen 1568 1624 Nationalbibliothek Prag Clementinum Catalogus personarum Sign Fb4 Osterreichische Nationalbibliothek Handschriftenabteilung Codices 11961 14214 Pontificia Universita Gregoriana di Roma Biblioteca Kircher Misc Epist XIII 567 33r XIV 568 fol 198r 199v Tiroler Landesarchiv Kanzlei Ehz Maximilian Hofregistratur Alphabetisches Leopoldinum Reihe II 51 Leopoldinum Kunstsachen Handschriften 3481 3484 Autogramme G Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum Innsbruck Dip 596 I FB 2705 FB 51838 Universitatsbibliothek Munchen Sign 4 Philos 309 28 Universitatsbibliothek Graz Ms 159 1 2 Literature EditBiagioli Mario Picturing Objects in the Making Scheiner Galilei and the Discovery of Sunspots in Ideals and Cultures of Knowledge in Early Modern Europe Detel and Zittel Hg Berlin 2002 39 95 Casanovas Juan Early Observations of Sunspots Scheiner and Galileo in 1st Advances in Solar Physics Euroconference Advances in the Physics of Sunspots ASP Conference Series 118 B Schmieder J C del Toro Iniesta M Vasquez Hg 1997 3 20 Daly Peter M Dimler G Richard amp Haub Rita Imago Figurata Studies Vol 3 Brepols Publishers Turnhout 2000 133 144 Daxecker Franz Briefe Christoph Scheiners an Erzherzog Leopold V von Osterreich Tirol von 1620 1632 in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 102 103 1993 94 401 404 Daxecker Franz Briefe des Naturwissenschaftlers Christoph Scheiner Erzherzog Leopold V von Osterreich Tirol 1620 1632 Innsbruck 1995 Daxecker Franz The Physicist and Astronomer Christoph Scheiner Biography Letters Works Veroffentlichungen der Universitat Innsbruck 246 2004 Daxecker Franz Die Disputatio des Astronomen Christoph Scheiner Acta Historica Astronomiae 23 Beitrage zur Astronomiegeschichte 7 2004 99 144 Daxecker Franz Scheiner Christoph Neue Deutsche Biographie 22 Berlin 2005 638 648 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiners Weg zur Optik in Ingolstadter Heimatblatter 3 54 1991 9 12 Johannes Hemleben Galilei Reinbek 1991 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiners allgemeine Aussagen uber Fernrohre in Die Jesuiten in Ingolstadt 1549 1773 Ingolstadt 1992 140 143 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiner s eye studies in Documenta Ophthalmologica 81 1992 27 35 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiners Geburtsort und Geburtsjahr Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 107 1998 118 122 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiner und die Camera obscura Acta Historica Astronomiae 28 Beitrage zur Astronomiegeschichte 8 2006 37 42 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiners Untersuchungen zur physiologischen Optik des Auges in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 102 103 1993 1994 385 399 Daxecker Franz Das Hauptwerk des Astronomen P Christoph Scheiner SJ Rosa Ursina sive Sol eine Zusammenfassung Ber nat med Verein Innsbruck 1996 Suppl 13 Daxecker Franz Der Astronom P Christoph Scheiner SJ als Bauleiter des ersten Jesuitenkirchen Neubaues in Innsbruck in Tiroler Heimatblatter 1996 14 20 Daxecker Franz Der Naturwissenschaftler Christoph Scheiner SJ in der optischen Literatur Ein medizinhistorischer Beitrag in Ber nat med Verein Innsbruck 80 1993 411 420 Daxecker Franz Der Physiker und Astronom Christoph Scheiner Universitatsverlag Wagner Innsbruck 2006 Daxecker Franz Further studies by Christoph Scheiner concerning the optics of the eye in Documenta Ophthalmologica 86 1994 153 161 Daxecker Franz Erzherzog Maximilian III Erzherzog Leopold V und die Astronomen Christoph Scheiner und Galileo Galilei in Tiroler Heimat 69 Innsbruck 2005 7 16 Daxecker Franz amp Subaric Lav Briefe der Generaloberen P Claudio Aquaviva SJ P Mutio Vitelleschi SJ und P Vincenco Carafa an den Astronomen P Christoph Scheiner SJ von 1614 bis 1649 in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 111 2002 101 148 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiner und die Optik des Auges in Sonne entdecken Ingolstadt 2000 43 45 Daxecker Franz Lexikon fur Theologie und Kirche 9 2000 120 121 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiners Hauptwerk Rosa Ursina sive Sol in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 109 2000 43 57 Daxecker Franz amp Lav Subaric Christoph Scheiners Sol ellipticus Veroffentlichungen der Universitat Innsbruck 226 Innsbruck 1998 Daxecker Franz P Christoph Scheiner und der Galilei Prozess in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 108 Ingolstadt 1999 111 112 Daxecker Franz Uber das Fernrohr und weitere Mitschriften von Vorlesungen Christoph Scheiners in Acta Historica Astronomiae 13 Beitrage zur Astronomiegeschichte 4 2001 19 32 Daxecker Franz amp Florian Schaffenrath Ein Nachruf auf den Astronomen Christoph Scheiner aus dem Jahr 1650 in Acta Historica Astronomiae 13 2001 Beitrage zur Astronomiegeschichte 4 33 45 Daxecker Franz Frontispize in den Werken P Christoph Scheiners SJ in Emblematik und Kunst der Jesuiten in Bayern Einfluss und Wirkung Peter M Daly G Richard Dimler SJ Rita Haub Hg Imago Figurata Studies Vol 3 Brepols Publishers Turnhout 2000 133 144 Daxecker Franz Neue Dokumente zu Christoph Scheiner Theses theologicae Vorlesungsmitschriften und ein Nachruf aus dem Jahr 1650 in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 110 2001 143 147 Daxecker Franz Schaffenrath Florian amp Subaric Lav Briefe Christoph Scheiners von 1600 bis 1634 in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 110 2001 117 141 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiners Lebensjahre zwischen 1633 und 1650 in Acta Historica Astronomiae 15 Beitrage zur Astronomiegeschichte 5 2002 40 46 Daxecker Franz Der Physiker und Astronom Christoph Scheiner Universitatsverlag Wagner Innsbruck 2006 Daxecker Franz Christoph Scheiner und der flussige Himmel in Acta Historica Astronomiae 36 Beitrage zur Astronomiegeschichte 9 2008 26 36 Duhr Bernhard Geschichte der Jesuiten in den Landern deutscher Zunge in der ersten Halfte des XVII Jahrhunderts 4 Bde Freiburg i Br 1907 1913 Bde 1 u 2 Munchen 1921 1928 Bde 3 u 4 2 2 227 435 436 Favaro Antonio Le Opere di Galileo Galilei Edizione Nazionale I XX Florence 1890 1909 Nachdruck Florenz 1968 Friess Peter Christoph Scheiner und die dritte Dimension in der Malerei in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 109 2000 33 42 Gassendi Petri Diniensis Ecclesiae Praepositi et in Academia Parisiensi Matheseos Regii Professoris Opera Omnia in sex tomos divisa Florence 1727 VI 38 42 43 49 50 370 371 376 377 382 Goercke Ernst Christoph Scheiners Ausfuhrungen uber Glaslinsen und ein moderner Nachahmungsversuch in Die Sterne 66 1990 371 379 Goercke Ernst Daxecker Franz amp Glasgucker Pater in Die Sterne 70 1994 286 289 Gorman Michael John A Matter of Faith Christoph Scheiner Jesuit censorship and the Trial of Galileo in Perspectives on Science 4 1996 283 320 Gorman Michael John The Scientific Counter revolution Mathematics natural philosophy and experimentalism in Jesuit culture 1580 c 1670 PhD thesis European University Institute Florenz 1998 Granada Miguel A Christoph Rothmann und die Auflosung der himmlischen Spharen Die Briefe an den Landgrafen von Hessen Kassel 1585 in Beitrage zur Astronomiegeschichte 2 Acta Historica Astronomiae 5 1999 34 57 Haub Rita Jesuitenkolleg Neisse in Sonne entdecken Ingolstadt 2000 20 Haub Rita Zwei Briefe Christoph Scheiners an Matthaus Rader in Sonne entdecken Christoph Scheiner 1575 1650 Ingolstadt 2000 24 25 Haub Rita Christoph Scheiner der Mensch Sein Leben als Jesuit und Naturwissenschafter in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 109 2000 15 31 Haub Rita Christoph Scheiner der Mensch Sein Leben als Jesuit und Naturwissenschafter in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 109 2000 15 31 Hofmann Siegfried Christoph Scheiner Galileo Galilei in Jesuiten in Ingolstadt 1549 1773 Ingolstadt 1992 160 163 Ingaliso Luigi Filosofia e Cosmologia in Christoph Scheiner Soveria Manelli Rubettino 2005 Kern Ralf Wissenschaftliche Instrumente in ihrer Zeit Vol 2 Cologne 2010 273 276 Koch Ludwig Jesuiten Lexikon Die Gesellschaft Jesu einst und jetzt Paderborn 1934 1601f Lukacs Ladislaus Catalogi Provinciae Austriae Bd 1 1551 1600 Bd 2 1601 1640 Monumenta Historica Societatis Jesu Rom 1978 1982 Mauthner Ludwig Vorlesungen uber die optischen Fehler des Auges Vienna 1876 122f 866f Mudry Anna Galileo Galilei Schriften Briefe Dokumente 2 Bde Munchen 1987 Bd 1 145 159 Bd 2 87 91 102 112 264 266 281 286 Polgar Laszlo Bibliographie sur L Histoire de la Compagnie de Jesus 1901 1980 3 Bde Rom 1901 1980 Bd 3 R Z Nissel Walter amp Remes Wilhelm Die Jesuiten in der Philatelie Rommerskirchen 2005 Ouwendijk George Christoph Scheiner s Cosmology Fluid Heavens and the Question of Authority Vortragsmanuskript Meeting der Renaissance Society of America New York 1 3 April 2004 1 10 Rosch Herbert Christoph Scheiner in Lebensbilder aus dem Bayerischen Schwaben Munchen 1959 183 211 Schmidl Johann Historia Soc Jesu Prov Bohemiae Prague 1747 1749 Shea William R Galileo Scheiner and the Interpretation of Sunspots in Isis 61 1970 498 519 Shea William R Mariano Artigas Galileo Galilei Aufstieg und Fall eines Genies Darmstadt 2006 Sommervogel Carlos Bibliotheque de la Compagnie de Jesus 9 Bde Brussel Paris 1890 1900 7 734 740 Stoll Hans Christoph Scheiner ein schwabischer Astronom in Schwabische Blatter fur Volksbildung und Heimatpflege 9 1958 45 49 Tape Walter Jarmo Moilanen Atmospheric Halos and the Search of Angle x Washington 2006 v Braunmuhl Anton Christoph Scheiner als Mathematiker Physiker und Astronom Bayerische Bibliothek 24 Bamberg 1891 v Braunmuhl Anton Originalbeobachtungen etc aus der Zeit der Entdeckung der Sonnenflecken in Jahrbuch fur Munchener Geschichte 5 1894 53 60 v Rohr Moritz Ausgewahlte Stucke aus Christoph Scheiners Augenbuch in Zeitschrift fur ophthalmologische Optik 7 1919 35 44 53 64 76 91 101 113 121 133 v Rohr Moritz Zur Wurdigung von Scheiners Augenstudien in Archiv fur Augenheilkunde 86 1920 247 263 van Helden Albert Galileo and Scheiner on Sunspots A Case Study in the Visual Language of Astronomy Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 140 1996 358 396 Wickihalter Rolf 350 Jahre nach Galilei s Inquisitionsprozess Eine Studie in physica didactica 11 1984 Teil I 37 60 Teil II 63 73 Willisch Norbert Christoph Scheiner der kannte die Sonn wie sonst keiner Zum 350 Todestag des grossen Gelehrten in Schlesischer Kulturspiegel 35 Wurzburg 2000 49 52 Wohlwill Emil Galilei und sein Kampf fur die copernicanische Lehre Bd 1 1909 237 396 472 484 Bd 2 1969 102 145 163 195 393 Ziggelaar August Astronomie der Jesuiten nordlich der Alpen Vier unveroffentlichte Jesuitenbriefe 1611 1620 in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 102 103 1993 94 369 384 Ziggelaar August Scheiners Vorlaufer von 1651 Neues Licht uber den Galilei Prozess von 1632 in Sammelblatt des Historischen Vereins Ingolstadt 109 2000 89 104 Ziggelaar August Scheiner und Grassi Widersacher Galileis in physica didactica 13 1986 35 43 Zinner Erns Entstehung und Ausbreitung der coppernicanischen Lehre Erlangen 1943 347 353 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Christoph Scheiner Galileo Project Christoph Scheiner High Altitude Observatory Christoph Scheiner Surveyor in berlin de Stadtmuseum Ingolstadt Christoph Scheiner Franz Daxecker 2003 Scheiner Christoph In Bautz Traugott ed Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Vol 21 Nordhausen Bautz cols 1307 1312 ISBN 3 88309 110 3 Fairfield University Christoph Scheiner Peter Abrahams Telescopes for solar research from Scheiner s Helioscopium to De la Rue s Photoheliograph Albert Van Helden Christoph Scheiner Norbert Willisch Scheiner in Neisse Universitat Freiburg Astronomie alte Geschichten und neue Physik Archimedes Projekt Sonnenflecken Scheiner Scheibe Markt Wald Christoph Scheiner Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Christopher Scheiner Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christoph Scheiner amp oldid 1133103380, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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