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Nicolaus Copernicus

Nicolaus Copernicus (/kˈpɜːrnɪkəs, kə-/;[2][3][4] Polish: Mikołaj Kopernik;[b] Middle Low German: Niklas Koppernigk, German: Nikolaus Kopernikus; 19 February 1473 – 24 May 1543) was a Renaissance polymath, active as a mathematician, astronomer, and Catholic canon, who formulated a model of the universe that placed the Sun rather than Earth at its center. In all likelihood, Copernicus developed his model independently of Aristarchus of Samos, an ancient Greek astronomer who had formulated such a model some eighteen centuries earlier.[5][c][d][e]

Nicolaus Copernicus
The "Toruń portrait" (anonymous, c. 1580)[a]
Born19 February 1473
Died24 May 1543 (aged 70)
Frauenburg, Royal Prussia, Poland
Education
Known for
Scientific career
Fields
  • Astronomy
  • Canon law
  • Economics
  • Mathematics
  • Medicine
  • Politics
Academic advisorsDomenico Maria Novara da Ferrara
Influences
InfluencedJohannes Kepler
Signature

The publication of Copernicus's model in his book De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres), just before his death in 1543, was a major event in the history of science, triggering the Copernican Revolution and making a pioneering contribution to the Scientific Revolution.[7]

Copernicus was born and died in Royal Prussia, a region that had been part of the Kingdom of Poland since 1466. A polyglot and polymath, he obtained a doctorate in canon law and was a mathematician, astronomer, physician, classics scholar, translator, governor, diplomat, and economist. From 1497 he was a Warmian Cathedral chapter canon. In 1517 he derived a quantity theory of money—a key concept in economics—and in 1519 he formulated an economic principle that later came to be called Gresham's law.[f]

Life

 
Copernicus's Toruń birthplace (ul. Kopernika 15, left). Together with no. 17 (right), it forms Muzeum Mikołaja Kopernika.

Nicolaus Copernicus was born on 19 February 1473 in the city of Toruń (Thorn), in the province of Royal Prussia, in the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland.[9][10]

His father was a merchant from Kraków and his mother was the daughter of a wealthy Toruń merchant.[11] Nicolaus was the youngest of four children. His brother Andreas (Andrew) became an Augustinian canon at Frombork (Frauenburg).[11] His sister Barbara, named after her mother, became a Benedictine nun and, in her final years, prioress of a convent in Chełmno (Kulm); she died after 1517.[11] His sister Katharina married the businessman and Toruń city councilor Barthel Gertner and left five children, whom Copernicus looked after to the end of his life.[11] Copernicus never married and is not known to have had children, but from at least 1531 until 1539 his relations with Anna Schilling, a live-in housekeeper, were seen as scandalous by two bishops of Warmia who urged him over the years to break off relations with his "mistress".[12]

Father's family

Copernicus's father's family can be traced to a village in Silesia between Nysa (Neiße) and Prudnik (Neustadt). The village's name has been variously spelled Kopernik,[g] Copernik, Copernic, Kopernic, Coprirnik, and today Koperniki.[14] In the 14th century, members of the family began moving to various other Silesian cities, to the Polish capital, Kraków (1367), and to Toruń (1400).[14] The father, Mikołaj the Elder, likely the son of Jan, came from the Kraków line.[14]

Nicolaus was named after his father, who appears in records for the first time as a well-to-do merchant who dealt in copper, selling it mostly in Danzig (Gdańsk).[15][16] He moved from Kraków to Toruń around 1458.[17] Toruń, situated on the Vistula River, was at that time embroiled in the Thirteen Years' War, in which the Kingdom of Poland and the Prussian Confederation, an alliance of Prussian cities, gentry and clergy, fought the Teutonic Order over control of the region. In this war, Hanseatic cities like Danzig and Toruń, Nicolaus Copernicus's hometown, chose to support the Polish King, Casimir IV Jagiellon, who promised to respect the cities' traditional vast independence, which the Teutonic Order had challenged. Nicolaus's father was actively engaged in the politics of the day and supported Poland and the cities against the Teutonic Order.[18] In 1454 he mediated negotiations between Poland's Cardinal Zbigniew Oleśnicki and the Prussian cities for repayment of war loans.[14] In the Second Peace of Thorn (1466), the Teutonic Order formally relinquished all claims to its western province, which as Royal Prussia remained a region of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland until the First (1772) and Second (1793) Partitions of Poland.

Copernicus's father married Barbara Watzenrode, the astronomer's mother, between 1461 and 1464.[14] He died about 1483.[11]

Mother's family

Nicolaus's mother, Barbara Watzenrode, was the daughter of a wealthy Toruń patrician and city councillor, Lucas Watzenrode the Elder (deceased 1462), and Katarzyna (widow of Jan Peckau), mentioned in other sources as Katarzyna Rüdiger gente Modlibóg (deceased 1476).[11] The Modlibógs were a prominent Polish family who had been well known in Poland's history since 1271.[19] The Watzenrode family, like the Kopernik family, had come from Silesia from near Świdnica (Schweidnitz), and after 1360 had settled in Toruń. They soon became one of the wealthiest and most influential patrician families.[11] Through the Watzenrodes' extensive family relationships by marriage, Copernicus was related to wealthy families of Toruń (Thorn), Gdańsk (Danzig) and Elbląg (Elbing), and to prominent Polish noble families of Prussia: the Czapskis, Działyńskis, Konopackis and Kościeleckis.[11] Lucas and Katherine had three children: Lucas Watzenrode the Younger (1447–1512), who would become Bishop of Warmia and Copernicus's patron; Barbara, the astronomer's mother (deceased after 1495); and Christina (deceased before 1502), who in 1459 married the Toruń merchant and mayor, Tiedeman von Allen.[11]

 
Copernicus's maternal uncle, Lucas Watzenrode the Younger

Lucas Watzenrode the Elder, a wealthy merchant and in 1439–62 president of the judicial bench, was a decided opponent of the Teutonic Knights.[11] In 1453 he was the delegate from Toruń at the Grudziądz (Graudenz) conference that planned the uprising against them.[11] During the ensuing Thirteen Years' War, he actively supported the Prussian cities' war effort with substantial monetary subsidies (only part of which he later re-claimed), with political activity in Toruń and Danzig, and by personally fighting in battles at Łasin (Lessen) and Malbork (Marienburg).[11] He died in 1462.[11]

Lucas Watzenrode the Younger, the astronomer's maternal uncle and patron, was educated at the University of Kraków (now Jagiellonian University) and at the universities of Cologne and Bologna. He was a bitter opponent of the Teutonic Order,[h] and its Grand Master once referred to him as "the devil incarnate".[i] In 1489 Watzenrode was elected Bishop of Warmia (Ermeland, Ermland) against the preference of King Casimir IV, who had hoped to install his own son in that seat.[22] As a result, Watzenrode quarreled with the king until Casimir IV's death three years later.[23] Watzenrode was then able to form close relations with three successive Polish monarchs: John I Albert, Alexander Jagiellon, and Sigismund I the Old. He was a friend and key advisor to each ruler, and his influence greatly strengthened the ties between Warmia and Poland proper.[24] Watzenrode came to be considered the most powerful man in Warmia, and his wealth, connections and influence allowed him to secure Copernicus's education and career as a canon at Frombork Cathedral.[22][j]

Education

In Poland

Upon his father's death, young Nicolaus's maternal uncle, Lucas Watzenrode the Younger (1447–1512), took the boy under his wing and saw to his education and career.[11] Watzenrode maintained contacts with leading intellectual figures in Poland and was a friend of the influential Italian-born humanist and Kraków courtier Filippo Buonaccorsi.[26] There are no surviving primary documents on the early years of Copernicus's childhood and education.[11] Copernicus biographers assume that Watzenrode first sent young Copernicus to St. John's School, at Toruń, where he himself had been a master.[11] Later, according to Armitage,[k] the boy attended the Cathedral School at Włocławek, up the Vistula River from Toruń, which prepared pupils for entrance to the University of Kraków, Watzenrode's alma mater in Poland's capital.[27]

 
Collegium Maius at Kraków University, Copernicus's Polish alma mater
University of Kraków 1491–95

In the winter semester of 1491–92 Copernicus, as "Nicolaus Nicolai de Thuronia", matriculated together with his brother Andrew at the University of Kraków (now Jagiellonian University).[11] Copernicus began his studies in the Department of Arts (from the fall of 1491, presumably until the summer or fall of 1495) in the heyday of the Kraków astronomical-mathematical school, acquiring the foundations for his subsequent mathematical achievements.[11] According to a later but credible tradition (Jan Brożek), Copernicus was a pupil of Albert Brudzewski, who by then (from 1491) was a professor of Aristotelian philosophy but taught astronomy privately outside the university; Copernicus became familiar with Brudzewski's widely read commentary to Georg von Peuerbach's Theoricæ novæ planetarum and almost certainly attended the lectures of Bernard of Biskupie and Wojciech Krypa of Szamotuły, and probably other astronomical lectures by Jan of Głogów, Michał of Wrocław (Breslau), Wojciech of Pniewy, and Marcin Bylica of Olkusz.[28]

Mathematical astronomy

Copernicus's Kraków studies gave him a thorough grounding in the mathematical astronomy taught at the university (arithmetic, geometry, geometric optics, cosmography, theoretical and computational astronomy) and a good knowledge of the philosophical and natural-science writings of Aristotle (De coelo, Metaphysics) and Averroes, stimulating his interest in learning and making him conversant with humanistic culture.[22] Copernicus broadened the knowledge that he took from the university lecture halls with independent reading of books that he acquired during his Kraków years (Euclid, Haly Abenragel, the Alfonsine Tables, Johannes Regiomontanus' Tabulae directionum); to this period, probably, also date his earliest scientific notes, now preserved partly at Uppsala University.[22] At Kraków Copernicus began collecting a large library on astronomy; it would later be carried off as war booty by the Swedes during the Deluge in the 1650s and is now at the Uppsala University Library.[29]

Contradictions in the systems of Aristotle and Ptolemy

Copernicus's four years at Kraków played an important role in the development of his critical faculties and initiated his analysis of logical contradictions in the two "official" systems of astronomy—Aristotle's theory of homocentric spheres, and Ptolemy's mechanism of eccentrics and epicycles—the surmounting and discarding of which would be the first step toward the creation of Copernicus's own doctrine of the structure of the universe.[22]

Warmia 1495–96

Without taking a degree, probably in the fall of 1495, Copernicus left Kraków for the court of his uncle Watzenrode, who in 1489 had been elevated to Prince-Bishop of Warmia and soon (before November 1495) sought to place his nephew in the Warmia canonry vacated by 26 August 1495 death of its previous tenant, Jan Czanow. For unclear reasons—probably due to opposition from part of the chapter, who appealed to Rome—Copernicus's installation was delayed, inclining Watzenrode to send both his nephews to study canon law in Italy, seemingly with a view to furthering their ecclesiastic careers and thereby also strengthening his own influence in the Warmia chapter.[22]

On 20 October 1497, Copernicus, by proxy, formally succeeded to the Warmia canonry which had been granted to him two years earlier. To this, by a document dated 10 January 1503 at Padua, he would add a sinecure at the Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross and St. Bartholomew in Wrocław (at the time in the Crown of Bohemia). Despite having been granted a papal indult on 29 November 1508 to receive further benefices, through his ecclesiastic career Copernicus not only did not acquire further prebends and higher stations (prelacies) at the chapter, but in 1538 he relinquished the Wrocław sinecure. It is unclear whether he was ever ordained a priest.[30] Edward Rosen asserts that he was not.[31][32] Copernicus did take minor orders, which sufficed for assuming a chapter canonry.[22] The Catholic Encyclopedia proposes that his ordination was probable, as in 1537 he was one of four candidates for the episcopal seat of Warmia, a position that required ordination.[33]

In Italy

University of Bologna 1496–1501

Meanwhile, leaving Warmia in mid-1496—possibly with the retinue of the chapter's chancellor, Jerzy Pranghe, who was going to Italy—in the fall, possibly in October, Copernicus arrived in Bologna and a few months later (after 6 January 1497) signed himself into the register of the Bologna University of Jurists' "German nation", which included young Poles from Silesia, Prussia and Pomerania as well as students of other nationalities.[22]

During his three-year stay at Bologna, which occurred between fall 1496 and spring 1501, Copernicus seems to have devoted himself less keenly to studying canon law (he received his doctorate in canon law only after seven years, following a second return to Italy in 1503) than to studying the humanities—probably attending lectures by Filippo Beroaldo, Antonio Urceo, called Codro, Giovanni Garzoni, and Alessandro Achillini—and to studying astronomy. He met the famous astronomer Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara and became his disciple and assistant.[22] Copernicus was developing new ideas inspired by reading the "Epitome of the Almagest" (Epitome in Almagestum Ptolemei) by George von Peuerbach and Johannes Regiomontanus (Venice, 1496). He verified its observations about certain peculiarities in Ptolemy's theory of the Moon's motion, by conducting on 9 March 1497 at Bologna a memorable observation of the occultation of Aldebaran, the brightest star in the Taurus constellation, by the moon. Copernicus the humanist sought confirmation for his growing doubts through close reading of Greek and Latin authors (Pythagoras, Aristarchos of Samos, Cleomedes, Cicero, Pliny the Elder, Plutarch, Philolaus, Heraclides, Ecphantos, Plato), gathering, especially while at Padua, fragmentary historic information about ancient astronomical, cosmological and calendar systems.[34]

 
Via Galliera 65, Bologna, site of house of Domenico Maria Novara
 
Close-up of plaque[l]
Rome 1500

Copernicus spent the jubilee year 1500 in Rome, where he arrived with his brother Andrew that spring, doubtless to perform an apprenticeship at the Papal Curia. Here, too, however, he continued his astronomical work begun at Bologna, observing, for example, a lunar eclipse on the night of 5–6 November 1500. According to a later account by Rheticus, Copernicus also—probably privately, rather than at the Roman Sapienza—as a "Professor Mathematum" (professor of astronomy) delivered, "to numerous... students and... leading masters of the science", public lectures devoted probably to a critique of the mathematical solutions of contemporary astronomy.[35]

University of Padua 1501–03

On his return journey doubtless stopping briefly at Bologna, in mid-1501 Copernicus arrived back in Warmia. After on 28 July receiving from the chapter a two-year extension of leave in order to study medicine (since "he may in future be a useful medical advisor to our Reverend Superior [Bishop Lucas Watzenrode] and the gentlemen of the chapter"), in late summer or in the fall he returned again to Italy, probably accompanied by his brother Andrew[m] and by Canon Bernhard Sculteti. This time he studied at the University of Padua, famous as a seat of medical learning, and—except for a brief visit to Ferrara in May–June 1503 to pass examinations for, and receive, his doctorate in canon law—he remained at Padua from fall 1501 to summer 1503.[35]

Copernicus studied medicine probably under the direction of leading Padua professors—Bartolomeo da Montagnana, Girolamo Fracastoro, Gabriele Zerbi, Alessandro Benedetti—and read medical treatises that he acquired at this time, by Valescus de Taranta, Jan Mesue, Hugo Senensis, Jan Ketham, Arnold de Villa Nova, and Michele Savonarola, which would form the embryo of his later medical library.[35]

Astrology

One of the subjects that Copernicus must have studied was astrology, since it was considered an important part of a medical education.[37] However, unlike most other prominent Renaissance astronomers, he appears never to have practiced or expressed any interest in astrology.[38]

Greek studies

As at Bologna, Copernicus did not limit himself to his official studies. It was probably the Padua years that saw the beginning of his Hellenistic interests. He familiarized himself with Greek language and culture with the aid of Theodorus Gaza's grammar (1495) and Johannes Baptista Chrestonius's dictionary (1499), expanding his studies of antiquity, begun at Bologna, to the writings of Bessarion, Lorenzo Valla, and others. There also seems to be evidence that it was during his Padua stay that the idea finally crystallized, of basing a new system of the world on the movement of the Earth.[35] As the time approached for Copernicus to return home, in spring 1503 he journeyed to Ferrara where, on 31 May 1503, having passed the obligatory examinations, he was granted the degree of Doctor of Canon Law (Nicolaus Copernich de Prusia, Jure Canonico ... et doctoratus[39]). No doubt it was soon after (at latest, in fall 1503) that he left Italy for good to return to Warmia.[35]

Planetary observations

Copernicus made three observations of Mercury, with errors of −3, −15 and −1 minutes of arc. He made one of Venus, with an error of −24 minutes. Four were made of Mars, with errors of 2, 20, 77, and 137 minutes. Four observations were made of Jupiter, with errors of 32, 51, −11 and 25 minutes. He made four of Saturn, with errors of 31, 20, 23 and −4 minutes.[40]

Other observations

With Novara, Copernicus observed an occultation of Aldebaran by the moon on 9 March 1497. Copernicus also observed a conjunction of Saturn and the moon on 4 March 1500. He saw an eclipse of the moon on 6 November 1500.[41][42]

Work

 
Copernicus's translation of Theophylact Simocatta's Epistles. Cover shows coat of arms of (clockwise from top) Poland, Lithuania and Kraków.
 
Copernicus's tower at Frombork, where he lived and worked; reconstructed since World War II
 
Olsztyn Castle, where Copernicus resided from 1516 to 1521

Having completed all his studies in Italy, 30-year-old Copernicus returned to Warmia, where he would live out the remaining 40 years of his life, apart from brief journeys to Kraków and to nearby Prussian cities: Toruń (Thorn), Gdańsk (Danzig), Elbląg (Elbing), Grudziądz (Graudenz), Malbork (Marienburg), Königsberg (Królewiec).[35]

The Prince-Bishopric of Warmia enjoyed substantial autonomy, with its own diet (parliament) and monetary unit (the same as in the other parts of Royal Prussia) and treasury.[43]

Copernicus was his uncle's secretary and physician from 1503 to 1510 (or perhaps till his uncle's death on 29 March 1512) and resided in the Bishop's castle at Lidzbark (Heilsberg), where he began work on his heliocentric theory. In his official capacity, he took part in nearly all his uncle's political, ecclesiastic and administrative-economic duties. From the beginning of 1504, Copernicus accompanied Watzenrode to sessions of the Royal Prussian diet held at Malbork and Elbląg and, write Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz, "participated... in all the more important events in the complex diplomatic game that ambitious politician and statesman played in defense of the particular interests of Prussia and Warmia, between hostility to the [Teutonic] Order and loyalty to the Polish Crown."[35]

In 1504–12 Copernicus made numerous journeys as part of his uncle's retinue—in 1504, to Toruń and Gdańsk, to a session of the Royal Prussian Council in the presence of Poland's King Alexander Jagiellon; to sessions of the Prussian diet at Malbork (1506), Elbląg (1507) and Sztum (Stuhm) (1512); and he may have attended a Poznań (Posen) session (1510) and the coronation of Poland's King Sigismund I the Old in Kraków (1507). Watzenrode's itinerary suggests that in spring 1509 Copernicus may have attended the Kraków sejm.[35]

It was probably on the latter occasion, in Kraków, that Copernicus submitted for printing at Jan Haller's press his translation, from Greek to Latin, of a collection, by the 7th-century Byzantine historian Theophylact Simocatta, of 85 brief poems called Epistles, or letters, supposed to have passed between various characters in a Greek story. They are of three kinds—"moral," offering advice on how people should live; "pastoral", giving little pictures of shepherd life; and "amorous", comprising love poems. They are arranged to follow one another in a regular rotation of subjects. Copernicus had translated the Greek verses into Latin prose, and he now published his version as Theophilacti scolastici Simocati epistolae morales, rurales et amatoriae interpretatione latina, which he dedicated to his uncle in gratitude for all the benefits he had received from him. With this translation, Copernicus declared himself on the side of the humanists in the struggle over the question of whether Greek literature should be revived.[44] Copernicus's first poetic work was a Greek epigram, composed probably during a visit to Kraków, for Johannes Dantiscus' epithalamium for Barbara Zapolya's 1512 wedding to King Zygmunt I the Old.[45]

Commentariolus – an initial outline of a heliocentric theory

Some time before 1514, Copernicus wrote an initial outline of his heliocentric theory known only from later transcripts, by the title (perhaps given to it by a copyist), Nicolai Copernici de hypothesibus motuum coelestium a se constitutis commentariolus—commonly referred to as the Commentariolus. It was a succinct theoretical description of the world's heliocentric mechanism, without mathematical apparatus, and differed in some important details of geometric construction from De revolutionibus; but it was already based on the same assumptions regarding Earth's triple motions. The Commentariolus, which Copernicus consciously saw as merely a first sketch for his planned book, was not intended for printed distribution. He made only a very few manuscript copies available to his closest acquaintances, including, it seems, several Kraków astronomers with whom he collaborated in 1515–30 in observing eclipses. Tycho Brahe would include a fragment from the Commentariolus in his own treatise, Astronomiae instauratae progymnasmata, published in Prague in 1602, based on a manuscript that he had received from the Bohemian physician and astronomer Tadeáš Hájek, a friend of Rheticus. The Commentariolus would appear complete in print for the first time only in 1878.[45]

Astronomical observations 1513–16

In 1510 or 1512 Copernicus moved to Frombork, a town to the northwest at the Vistula Lagoon on the Baltic Sea coast. There, in April 1512, he participated in the election of Fabian of Lossainen as Prince-Bishop of Warmia. It was only in early June 1512 that the chapter gave Copernicus an "external curia"—a house outside the defensive walls of the cathedral mount. In 1514 he purchased the northwestern tower within the walls of the Frombork stronghold. He would maintain both these residences to the end of his life, despite the devastation of the chapter's buildings by a raid against Frauenburg carried out by the Teutonic Order in January 1520, during which Copernicus's astronomical instruments were probably destroyed. Copernicus conducted astronomical observations in 1513–16 presumably from his external curia; and in 1522–43, from an unidentified "small tower" (turricula), using primitive instruments modeled on ancient ones—the quadrant, triquetrum, armillary sphere. At Frombork Copernicus conducted over half of his more than 60 registered astronomical observations.[45]

Administrative duties in Warmia

Having settled permanently at Frombork, where he would reside to the end of his life, with interruptions in 1516–19 and 1520–21, Copernicus found himself at the Warmia chapter's economic and administrative center, which was also one of Warmia's two chief centers of political life. In the difficult, politically complex situation of Warmia, threatened externally by the Teutonic Order's aggressions (attacks by Teutonic bands; the Polish-Teutonic War of 1519–21; Albert's plans to annex Warmia), internally subject to strong separatist pressures (the selection of the prince-bishops of Warmia; currency reform), he, together with part of the chapter, represented a program of strict cooperation with the Polish Crown and demonstrated in all his public activities (the defense of his country against the Order's plans of conquest; proposals to unify its monetary system with the Polish Crown's; support for Poland's interests in the Warmia dominion's ecclesiastic administration) that he was consciously a citizen of the Polish-Lithuanian Republic. Soon after the death of uncle Bishop Watzenrode, he participated in the signing of the Second Treaty of Piotrków Trybunalski (7 December 1512), governing the appointment of the Bishop of Warmia, declaring, despite opposition from part of the chapter, for loyal cooperation with the Polish Crown.[45]

That same year (before 8 November 1512) Copernicus assumed responsibility, as magister pistoriae, for administering the chapter's economic enterprises (he would hold this office again in 1530), having already since 1511 fulfilled the duties of chancellor and visitor of the chapter's estates.[45]

His administrative and economic duties did not distract Copernicus, in 1512–15, from intensive observational activity. The results of his observations of Mars and Saturn in this period, and especially a series of four observations of the Sun made in 1515, led to the discovery of the variability of Earth's eccentricity and of the movement of the solar apogee in relation to the fixed stars, which in 1515–19 prompted his first revisions of certain assumptions of his system. Some of the observations that he made in this period may have had a connection with a proposed reform of the Julian calendar made in the first half of 1513 at the request of the Bishop of Fossombrone, Paul of Middelburg. Their contacts in this matter in the period of the Fifth Lateran Council were later memorialized in a complimentary mention in Copernicus's dedicatory epistle in Dē revolutionibus orbium coelestium and in a treatise by Paul of Middelburg, Secundum compendium correctionis Calendarii (1516), which mentions Copernicus among the learned men who had sent the Council proposals for the calendar's emendation.[46]

During 1516–21, Copernicus resided at Olsztyn (Allenstein) Castle as economic administrator of Warmia, including Olsztyn (Allenstein) and Pieniężno (Mehlsack). While there, he wrote a manuscript, Locationes mansorum desertorum (Locations of Deserted Fiefs), with a view to populating those fiefs with industrious farmers and so bolstering the economy of Warmia. When Olsztyn was besieged by the Teutonic Knights during the Polish–Teutonic War, Copernicus directed the defense of Olsztyn and Warmia by Royal Polish forces. He also represented the Polish side in the ensuing peace negotiations.[47]

 
Copernicus holding lily-of-the-valley: portrait in Nicolaus Reusner's Icones (1587).[48][n]
Advisor on monetary reform

Copernicus for years advised the Royal Prussian sejmik on monetary reform, particularly in the 1520s when that was a major question in regional Prussian politics.[49] In 1526 he wrote a study on the value of money, "Monetae cudendae ratio". In it he formulated an early iteration of the theory, now called Gresham's law, that "bad" (debased) coinage drives "good" (un-debased) coinage out of circulation—several decades before Thomas Gresham. He also, in 1517, set down a quantity theory of money, a principal concept in economics to the present day. Copernicus's recommendations on monetary reform were widely read by leaders of both Prussia and Poland in their attempts to stabilize currency.[50]

Copernican system presented to the Pope

In 1533, Johann Widmanstetter, secretary to Pope Clement VII, explained Copernicus's heliocentric system to the Pope and two cardinals. The Pope was so pleased that he gave Widmanstetter a valuable gift.[51] In 1535 Bernard Wapowski wrote a letter to a gentleman in Vienna, urging him to publish an enclosed almanac, which he claimed had been written by Copernicus. This is the only mention of a Copernicus almanac in the historical records. The "almanac" was likely Copernicus's tables of planetary positions. Wapowski's letter mentions Copernicus's theory about the motions of the earth. Nothing came of Wapowski's request, because he died a couple of weeks later.[51]

Following the death of Prince-Bishop of Warmia Mauritius Ferber (1 July 1537), Copernicus participated in the election of his successor, Johannes Dantiscus (20 September 1537). Copernicus was one of four candidates for the post, written in at the initiative of Tiedemann Giese; but his candidacy was actually pro forma, since Dantiscus had earlier been named coadjutor bishop to Ferber and since Dantiscus had the backing of Poland's King Sigismund I.[52] At first Copernicus maintained friendly relations with the new Prince-Bishop, assisting him medically in spring 1538 and accompanying him that summer on an inspection tour of Chapter holdings. But that autumn, their friendship was strained by suspicions over Copernicus's housekeeper, Anna Schilling, whom Dantiscus banished from Frombork in spring 1539.[52]

Medical work

In his younger days, Copernicus the physician had treated his uncle, brother and other chapter members. In later years he was called upon to attend the elderly bishops who in turn occupied the see of Warmia—Mauritius Ferber and Johannes Dantiscus—and, in 1539, his old friend Tiedemann Giese, Bishop of Chełmno (Kulm). In treating such important patients, he sometimes sought consultations from other physicians, including the physician to Duke Albert and, by letter, the Polish Royal Physician.[53]

In the spring of 1541, Duke Albert—former Grand Master of the Teutonic Order who had converted the Monastic State of the Teutonic Knights into a Lutheran and hereditary realm, the Duchy of Prussia, upon doing homage to his uncle, the King of Poland, Sigismund I—summoned Copernicus to Königsberg to attend the Duke's counselor, George von Kunheim, who had fallen seriously ill, and for whom the Prussian doctors seemed unable to do anything. Copernicus went willingly; he had met von Kunheim during negotiations over reform of the coinage. And Copernicus had come to feel that Albert himself was not such a bad person; the two had many intellectual interests in common. The Chapter readily gave Copernicus permission to go, as it wished to remain on good terms with the Duke, despite his Lutheran faith. In about a month the patient recovered, and Copernicus returned to Frombork. For a time, he continued to receive reports on von Kunheim's condition, and to send him medical advice by letter.[54]

Protestant attacks on the Copernican system

Some of Copernicus's close friends turned Protestant, but Copernicus never showed a tendency in that direction. The first attacks on him came from Protestants. Wilhelm Gnapheus, a Dutch refugee settled in Elbląg, wrote a comedy in Latin, Morosophus (The Foolish Sage), and staged it at the Latin school that he had established there. In the play, Copernicus was caricatured as the eponymous Morosophus, a haughty, cold, aloof man who dabbled in astrology, considered himself inspired by God, and was rumored to have written a large work that was moldering in a chest.[26]

Elsewhere Protestants were the first to react to news of Copernicus's theory. Melanchthon wrote:

Some people believe that it is excellent and correct to work out a thing as absurd as did that Sarmatian [i.e., Polish] astronomer who moves the earth and stops the sun. Indeed, wise rulers should have curbed such light-mindedness.[26]

Nevertheless, in 1551, eight years after Copernicus's death, astronomer Erasmus Reinhold published, under the sponsorship of Copernicus's former military adversary, the Protestant Duke Albert, the Prussian Tables, a set of astronomical tables based on Copernicus's work. Astronomers and astrologers quickly adopted it in place of its predecessors.[55]

Heliocentrism

 
"Nicolaus Copernicus Tornaeus Borussus Mathemat.", 1597

Some time before 1514 Copernicus made available to friends his "Commentariolus" ("Little Commentary"), a manuscript describing his ideas about the heliocentric hypothesis.[o] It contained seven basic assumptions (detailed below).[56] Thereafter he continued gathering data for a more detailed work.

At about 1532 Copernicus had basically completed his work on the manuscript of Dē revolutionibus orbium coelestium; but despite urging by his closest friends, he resisted openly publishing his views, not wishing—as he confessed—to risk the scorn "to which he would expose himself on account of the novelty and incomprehensibility of his theses."[52]

Reception of the Copernican system in Rome

In 1533, Johann Albrecht Widmannstetter delivered a series of lectures in Rome outlining Copernicus's theory. Pope Clement VII and several Catholic cardinals heard the lectures and were interested in the theory. On 1 November 1536, Cardinal Nikolaus von Schönberg, Archbishop of Capua, wrote to Copernicus from Rome:

Some years ago word reached me concerning your proficiency, of which everybody constantly spoke. At that time I began to have a very high regard for you... For I had learned that you had not merely mastered the discoveries of the ancient astronomers uncommonly well but had also formulated a new cosmology. In it you maintain that the earth moves; that the sun occupies the lowest, and thus the central, place in the universe... Therefore with the utmost earnestness I entreat you, most learned sir, unless I inconvenience you, to communicate this discovery of yours to scholars, and at the earliest possible moment to send me your writings on the sphere of the universe together with the tables and whatever else you have that is relevant to this subject ...[57]

By then Copernicus's work was nearing its definitive form, and rumors about his theory had reached educated people all over Europe. Despite urgings from many quarters, Copernicus delayed publication of his book, perhaps from fear of criticism—a fear delicately expressed in the subsequent dedication of his masterpiece to Pope Paul III. Scholars disagree on whether Copernicus's concern was limited to possible astronomical and philosophical objections, or whether he was also concerned about religious objections.[p]

De revolutionibus orbium coelestium

Copernicus was still working on De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (even if not certain that he wanted to publish it) when in 1539 Georg Joachim Rheticus, a Wittenberg mathematician, arrived in Frombork. Philipp Melanchthon, a close theological ally of Martin Luther, had arranged for Rheticus to visit several astronomers and study with them. Rheticus became Copernicus's pupil, staying with him for two years and writing a book, Narratio prima (First Account), outlining the essence of Copernicus's theory. In 1542 Rheticus published a treatise on trigonometry by Copernicus (later included as chapters 13 and 14 of Book I of De revolutionibus).[58] Under strong pressure from Rheticus, and having seen the favorable first general reception of his work, Copernicus finally agreed to give De revolutionibus to his close friend, Tiedemann Giese, bishop of Chełmno (Kulm), to be delivered to Rheticus for printing by the German printer Johannes Petreius at Nuremberg (Nürnberg), Germany. While Rheticus initially supervised the printing, he had to leave Nuremberg before it was completed, and he handed over the task of supervising the rest of the printing to a Lutheran theologian, Andreas Osiander.[59]

Osiander added an unauthorised and unsigned preface, defending Copernicus's work against those who might be offended by its novel hypotheses. He argued that "different hypotheses are sometimes offered for one and the same motion [and therefore] the astronomer will take as his first choice that hypothesis which is the easiest to grasp." According to Osiander, "these hypotheses need not be true nor even probable. [I]f they provide a calculus consistent with the observations, that alone is enough."[60]

Death

 
Frombork Cathedral

Toward the close of 1542, Copernicus was seized with apoplexy and paralysis, and he died at age 70 on 24 May 1543. Legend has it that he was presented with the final printed pages of his Dē revolutionibus orbium coelestium on the very day that he died, allowing him to take farewell of his life's work.[q] He is reputed to have awoken from a stroke-induced coma, looked at his book, and then died peacefully.[r]

Copernicus was reportedly buried in Frombork Cathedral, where a 1580 epitaph stood until being defaced; it was replaced in 1735. For over two centuries, archaeologists searched the cathedral in vain for Copernicus's remains. Efforts to locate them in 1802, 1909, 1939 had come to nought. In 2004 a team led by Jerzy Gąssowski, head of an archaeology and anthropology institute in Pułtusk, began a new search, guided by the research of historian Jerzy Sikorski.[61][62] In August 2005, after scanning beneath the cathedral floor, they discovered what they believed to be Copernicus's remains.[63]

The discovery was announced only after further research, on 3 November 2008. Gąssowski said he was "almost 100 percent sure it is Copernicus".[64] Forensic expert Capt. Dariusz Zajdel of the Polish Police Central Forensic Laboratory used the skull to reconstruct a face that closely resembled the features—including a broken nose and a scar above the left eye—on a Copernicus self-portrait.[64] The expert also determined that the skull belonged to a man who had died around age 70—Copernicus's age at the time of his death.[63]

The grave was in poor condition, and not all the remains of the skeleton were found; missing, among other things, was the lower jaw.[65] The DNA from the bones found in the grave matched hair samples taken from a book owned by Copernicus which was kept at the library of the University of Uppsala in Sweden.[62][66]

On 22 May 2010, Copernicus was given a second funeral in a Mass led by Józef Kowalczyk, the former papal nuncio to Poland and newly named Primate of Poland. Copernicus's remains were reburied in the same spot in Frombork Cathedral where part of his skull and other bones had been found. A black granite tombstone now identifies him as the founder of the heliocentric theory and also a church canon. The tombstone bears a representation of Copernicus's model of the Solar System—a golden Sun encircled by six of the planets.[67]

Copernican system

Predecessors

Philolaus (c. 470 – c. 385 BCE) described an astronomical system in which a Central Fire (different from the Sun) occupied the centre of the universe, and a counter-Earth, the Earth, Moon, the Sun itself, planets, and stars all revolved around it, in that order outward from the centre.[68] Heraclides Ponticus (387–312 BCE) proposed that the Earth rotates on its axis.[69]Aristarchus of Samos (c. 310 BCE – c. 230 BCE) was the first to advance a theory that the earth orbited the sun.[70] Further mathematical details of Aristarchus's heliocentric system were worked out around 150 BCE by the Hellenistic astronomer Seleucus of Seleucia. Though Aristarchus's original text has been lost, a reference in Archimedes' book The Sand Reckoner (Archimedis Syracusani Arenarius & Dimensio Circuli) describes a work by Aristarchus in which he advanced the heliocentric model. Thomas Heath gives the following English translation of Archimedes's text:[71]


You are now aware ['you' being King Gelon] that the "universe" is the name given by most astronomers to the sphere the centre of which is the centre of the earth, while its radius is equal to the straight line between the centre of the sun and the centre of the earth. This is the common account (τά γραφόμενα) as you have heard from astronomers. But Aristarchus has brought out a book consisting of certain hypotheses, wherein it appears, as a consequence of the assumptions made, that the universe is many times greater than the "universe" just mentioned. His hypotheses are that the fixed stars and the sun remain unmoved, that the earth revolves about the sun on the circumference of a circle, the sun lying in the middle of the orbit, and that the sphere of the fixed stars, situated about the same centre as the sun, is so great that the circle in which he supposes the earth to revolve bears such a proportion to the distance of the fixed stars as the centre of the sphere bears to its surface.

In an early unpublished manuscript of De Revolutionibus (which still survives), Copernicus mentioned the (non-heliocentric) 'moving Earth' theory of Philolaus and the possibility that Aristarchus also had a 'moving Earth' theory (though it is unlikely that he was aware that it was a heliocentric theory). He removed both references from his final published manuscript.[c][e]

Copernicus was probably aware that Pythagoras's system involved a moving Earth. The Pythagorean system was mentioned by Aristotle.[73]

Copernicus owned a copy of Giorgio Valla's De expetendis et fugiendis rebus, which included a translation of Plutarch's reference to Aristarchus's heliostaticism.[74]

In Copernicus's dedication of On the Revolutions to Pope Paul III—which Copernicus hoped would dampen criticism of his heliocentric theory by "babblers... completely ignorant of [astronomy]"—the book's author wrote that, in rereading all of philosophy, in the pages of Cicero and Plutarch he had found references to those few thinkers who dared to move the Earth "against the traditional opinion of astronomers and almost against common sense."

The prevailing theory during Copernicus's lifetime was the one that Ptolemy published in his Almagest c. 150 CE; the Earth was the stationary center of the universe. Stars were embedded in a large outer sphere that rotated rapidly, approximately daily, while each of the planets, the Sun, and the Moon were embedded in their own, smaller spheres. Ptolemy's system employed devices, including epicycles, deferents and equants, to account for observations that the paths of these bodies differed from simple, circular orbits centered on the Earth.[75]

Beginning in the 10th century, a tradition criticizing Ptolemy developed within Islamic astronomy, which climaxed with Ibn al-Haytham of Basra's Al-Shukūk 'alā Baṭalamiyūs ("Doubts Concerning Ptolemy").[76] Several Islamic astronomers questioned the Earth's apparent immobility,[77][78] and centrality within the universe.[79] Some accepted that the earth rotates around its axis, such as Abu Sa'id al-Sijzi (d. c. 1020).[80][81] According to al-Biruni, al-Sijzi invented an astrolabe based on a belief held by some of his contemporaries "that the motion we see is due to the Earth's movement and not to that of the sky."[81][82] That others besides al-Sijzi held this view is further confirmed by a reference from an Arabic work in the 13th century which states:

According to the geometers [or engineers] (muhandisīn), the earth is in constant circular motion, and what appears to be the motion of the heavens is actually due to the motion of the earth and not the stars.[81]

In the 12th century, Nur ad-Din al-Bitruji proposed a complete alternative to the Ptolemaic system (although not heliocentric).[83][84] He declared the Ptolemaic system as an imaginary model, successful at predicting planetary positions, but not real or physical.[83][84] Al-Bitruji's alternative system spread through most of Europe during the 13th century, with debates and refutations of his ideas continued up to the 16th century.[84]

Mathematical techniques developed in the 13th to 14th centuries by Mo'ayyeduddin al-Urdi, Nasir al-Din al-Tusi, and Ibn al-Shatir for geocentric models of planetary motions closely resemble some of those used later by Copernicus in his heliocentric models.[85] Copernicus used what is now known as the Urdi lemma and the Tusi couple in the same planetary models as found in Arabic sources.[86] Furthermore, the exact replacement of the equant by two epicycles used by Copernicus in the Commentariolus was found in an earlier work by Ibn al-Shatir (d. c. 1375) of Damascus.[87] Ibn al-Shatir's lunar and Mercury models are also identical to those of Copernicus.[88] This has led some scholars to argue that Copernicus must have had access to some yet to be identified work on the ideas of those earlier astronomers.[89] However, no likely candidate for this conjectured work has yet come to light, and other scholars have argued that Copernicus could well have developed these ideas independently of the late Islamic tradition.[90] Nevertheless, Copernicus cited some of the Islamic astronomers whose theories and observations he used in De Revolutionibus, namely al-Battani, Thabit ibn Qurra, al-Zarqali, Averroes, and al-Bitruji.[91]

Copernicus

Copernicus's schematic diagram of his heliocentric theory of the Solar System from De revolutionibus orbium coelestium[92]
 
As it appears in the surviving autograph manuscript
 
As it appears in the first printed edition

Copernicus's major work on his heliocentric theory was Dē revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres), published in the year of his death, 1543. He had formulated his theory by 1510. "He wrote out a short overview of his new heavenly arrangement [known as the Commentariolus, or Brief Sketch], also probably in 1510 [but no later than May 1514], and sent it off to at least one correspondent beyond Varmia [the Latin for "Warmia"]. That person in turn copied the document for further circulation, and presumably the new recipients did, too..."[93]

Copernicus's Commentariolus summarized his heliocentric theory. It listed the "assumptions" upon which the theory was based, as follows:[94]

  1. There is no one center of all the celestial circles[95] or spheres.[96]
  2. The center of the earth is not the center of the universe, but only the center towards which heavy bodies move and the center of the lunar sphere.
  3. All the spheres surround the sun as if it were in the middle of them all, and therefore the center of the universe is near the sun.
  4. The ratio of the earth's distance from the sun to the height of the firmament (outermost celestial sphere containing the stars) is so much smaller than the ratio of the earth's radius to its distance from the sun that the distance from the earth to the sun is imperceptible in comparison with the height of the firmament.
  5. Whatever motion appears in the firmament arises not from any motion of the firmament, but from the earth's motion. The earth together with its circumjacent elements performs a complete rotation on its fixed poles in a daily motion, while the firmament and highest heaven abide unchanged.
  6. What appear to us as motions of the sun arise not from its motion but from the motion of the earth and our sphere, with which we revolve about the sun like any other planet. The earth has, then, more than one motion.
  7. The apparent retrograde and direct motion of the planets arises not from their motion but from the earth's. The motion of the earth alone, therefore, suffices to explain so many apparent inequalities in the heavens.

De revolutionibus itself was divided into six sections or parts, called "books":[97]

  1. General vision of the heliocentric theory, and a summarized exposition of his idea of the World
  2. Mainly theoretical, presents the principles of spherical astronomy and a list of stars (as a basis for the arguments developed in the subsequent books)
  3. Mainly dedicated to the apparent motions of the Sun and to related phenomena
  4. Description of the Moon and its orbital motions
  5. Exposition of the motions in longitude of the non-terrestrial planets
  6. Exposition of the motions in latitude of the non-terrestrial planets

Successors

 
Casket with Copernicus's remains on exhibition in Olsztyn

Georg Joachim Rheticus could have been Copernicus's successor, but did not rise to the occasion.[51] Erasmus Reinhold could have been his successor, but died prematurely.[51] The first of the great successors was Tycho Brahe[51] (though he did not think the Earth orbited the Sun), followed by Johannes Kepler,[51] who had collaborated with Tycho in Prague and benefited from Tycho's decades' worth of detailed observational data.[98]

Despite the near universal acceptance later of the heliocentric idea (though not the epicycles or the circular orbits), Copernicus's theory was originally slow to catch on. Scholars hold that sixty years after the publication of The Revolutions there were only around 15 astronomers espousing Copernicanism in all of Europe: "Thomas Digges and Thomas Harriot in England; Giordano Bruno and Galileo Galilei in Italy; Diego Zuniga in Spain; Simon Stevin in the Low Countries; and in Germany, the largest group—Georg Joachim Rheticus, Michael Maestlin, Christoph Rothmann (who may have later recanted),[99] and Johannes Kepler."[99] Additional possibilities are Englishman William Gilbert, along with Achilles Gasser, Georg Vogelin, Valentin Otto, and Tiedemann Giese.[99]

Arthur Koestler, in his popular book The Sleepwalkers, asserted that Copernicus's book had not been widely read on its first publication.[100] This claim was trenchantly criticised by Edward Rosen,[s] and has been decisively disproved by Owen Gingerich, who examined nearly every surviving copy of the first two editions and found copious marginal notes by their owners throughout many of them. Gingerich published his conclusions in 2004 in The Book Nobody Read.[101]

The intellectual climate of the time "remained dominated by Aristotelian philosophy and the corresponding Ptolemaic astronomy. At that time there was no reason to accept the Copernican theory, except for its mathematical simplicity [by avoiding using the equant in determining planetary positions]."[102] Tycho Brahe's system ("that the earth is stationary, the sun revolves about the earth, and the other planets revolve about the sun")[102] also directly competed with Copernicus's. It was only a half-century later with the work of Kepler and Galileo that any substantial evidence defending Copernicanism appeared, starting "from the time when Galileo formulated the principle of inertia...[which] helped to explain why everything would not fall off the earth if it were in motion."[102] "[Not until] after Isaac Newton formulated the universal law of gravitation and the laws of mechanics [in his 1687 Principia], which unified terrestrial and celestial mechanics, was the heliocentric view generally accepted."[102]

 
 
In 1610 Galileo Galilei observed with his telescope that Venus showed phases, despite remaining near the Sun in Earth's sky (first image). This proved that it orbits the Sun and not Earth, as predicted by Copernicus's heliocentric model and disproved the then conventional geocentric model (second image).

Controversy

The immediate result of the 1543 publication of Copernicus's book was only mild controversy. At the Council of Trent (1545–63) neither Copernicus's theory nor calendar reform (which would later use tables deduced from Copernicus's calculations) were discussed.[103] It has been much debated why it was not until six decades after the publication of De revolutionibus that the Catholic Church took any official action against it, even the efforts of Tolosani going unheeded. Catholic side opposition only commenced seventy-three years later, when it was occasioned by Galileo.[104]

Tolosani

The first notable to move against Copernicanism was the Magister of the Holy Palace (i.e., the Catholic Church's chief censor), Dominican Bartolomeo Spina, who "expressed a desire to stamp out the Copernican doctrine".[105] But with Spina's death in 1546, his cause fell to his friend, the well-known theologian-astronomer, the Dominican Giovanni Maria Tolosani of the Convent of St. Mark in Florence. Tolosani had written a treatise on reforming the calendar (in which astronomy would play a large role) and had attended the Fifth Lateran Council (1512–1517) to discuss the matter. He had obtained a copy of De Revolutionibus in 1544. His denunciation of Copernicanism was written a year later, in 1545, in an appendix to his unpublished work, On the Truth of Sacred Scripture.[106]

Emulating the rationalistic style of Thomas Aquinas, Tolosani sought to refute Copernicanism by philosophical argument. Copernicanism was absurd, according to Tolosani, because it was scientifically unproven and unfounded. First, Copernicus had assumed the motion of the Earth but offered no physical theory whereby one would deduce this motion. (No one realized that the investigation into Copernicanism would result in a rethinking of the entire field of physics.) Second, Tolosani charged that Copernicus's thought process was backwards. He held that Copernicus had come up with his idea and then sought phenomena that would support it, rather than observing phenomena and deducing from them the idea of what caused them. In this, Tolosani was linking Copernicus's mathematical equations with the practices of the Pythagoreans (whom Aristotle had made arguments against, which were later picked up by Thomas Aquinas). It was argued that mathematical numbers were a mere product of the intellect without any physical reality, and as such could not provide physical causes in the investigation of nature.[107]

Some astronomical hypotheses at the time (such as epicycles and eccentrics) were seen as mere mathematical devices to adjust calculations of where the heavenly bodies would appear, rather than an explanation of the cause of those motions. (As Copernicus still maintained the idea of perfectly spherical orbits, he relied on epicycles.) This "saving the phenomena" was seen as proof that astronomy and mathematics could not be taken as serious means to determine physical causes. Tolosani invoked this view in his final critique of Copernicus, saying that his biggest error was that he had started with "inferior" fields of science to make pronouncements about "superior" fields. Copernicus had used mathematics and astronomy to postulate about physics and cosmology, rather than beginning with the accepted principles of physics and cosmology to determine things about astronomy and mathematics. Thus Copernicus seemed to be undermining the whole system of the philosophy of science at the time. Tolosani held that Copernicus had fallen into philosophical error because he had not been versed in physics and logic; anyone without such knowledge would make a poor astronomer and be unable to distinguish truth from falsehood. Because Copernicanism had not met the criteria for scientific truth set out by Thomas Aquinas, Tolosani held that it could only be viewed as a wild unproven theory.[108][109]

Tolosani recognized that the Ad Lectorem preface to Copernicus's book was not actually by him. Its thesis that astronomy as a whole would never be able to make truth claims was rejected by Tolosani (though he still held that Copernicus's attempt to describe physical reality had been faulty); he found it ridiculous that Ad Lectorem had been included in the book (unaware that Copernicus had not authorized its inclusion). Tolosani wrote: "By means of these words [of the Ad Lectorem], the foolishness of this book's author is rebuked. For by a foolish effort he [Copernicus] tried to revive the weak Pythagorean opinion [that the element of fire was at the center of the Universe], long ago deservedly destroyed, since it is expressly contrary to human reason and also opposes holy writ. From this situation, there could easily arise disagreements between Catholic expositors of holy scripture and those who might wish to adhere obstinately to this false opinion."[110] Tolosani declared: "Nicolaus Copernicus neither read nor understood the arguments of Aristotle the philosopher and Ptolemy the astronomer."[106] Tolosani wrote that Copernicus "is expert indeed in the sciences of mathematics and astronomy, but he is very deficient in the sciences of physics and logic. Moreover, it appears that he is unskilled with regard to [the interpretation of] holy scripture, since he contradicts several of its principles, not without danger of infidelity to himself and the readers of his book. ...his arguments have no force and can very easily be taken apart. For it is stupid to contradict an opinion accepted by everyone over a very long time for the strongest reasons, unless the impugner uses more powerful and insoluble demonstrations and completely dissolves the opposed reasons. But he does not do this in the least."[110]

Tolosani declared that he had written against Copernicus "for the purpose of preserving the truth to the common advantage of the Holy Church."[111] Despite this, his work remained unpublished and there is no evidence that it received serious consideration. Robert Westman describes it as becoming a "dormant" viewpoint with "no audience in the Catholic world" of the late sixteenth century, but also notes that there is some evidence that it did become known to Tommaso Caccini, who would criticize Galileo in a sermon in December 1613.[111]

Theology

 
Photograph of a mid-16th-century portrait[t]

Tolosani may have criticized the Copernican theory as scientifically unproven and unfounded, but the theory also conflicted with the theology of the time, as can be seen in a sample of the works of John Calvin. In his Commentary on Genesis he said that "We indeed are not ignorant that the circuit of the heavens is finite, and that the earth, like a little globe, is placed in the centre."[112] In his commentary on Psalms 93:1 he states that "The heavens revolve daily, and, immense as is their fabric and inconceivable the rapidity of their revolutions, we experience no concussion.... How could the earth hang suspended in the air were it not upheld by God's hand? By what means could it maintain itself unmoved, while the heavens above are in constant rapid motion, did not its Divine Maker fix and establish it."[113] One sharp point of conflict between Copernicus's theory and the Bible concerned the story of the Battle of Gibeon in the Book of Joshua where the Hebrew forces were winning but whose opponents were likely to escape once night fell. This is averted by Joshua's prayers causing the Sun and the Moon to stand still. Martin Luther once made a remark about Copernicus, although without mentioning his name. According to Anthony Lauterbach, while eating with Martin Luther the topic of Copernicus arose during dinner on 4 June 1539 (in the same year as professor George Joachim Rheticus of the local University had been granted leave to visit him). Luther is said to have remarked "So it goes now. Whoever wants to be clever must agree with nothing others esteem. He must do something of his own. This is what that fellow does who wishes to turn the whole of astronomy upside down. Even in these things that are thrown into disorder I believe the Holy Scriptures, for Joshua commanded the sun to stand still and not the earth."[102] These remarks were made four years before the publication of On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres and a year before Rheticus's Narratio Prima. In John Aurifaber's account of the conversation Luther calls Copernicus "that fool" rather than "that fellow", this version is viewed by historians as less reliably sourced.[102]

Luther's collaborator Philipp Melanchthon also took issue with Copernicanism. After receiving the first pages of Narratio Prima from Rheticus himself, Melanchthon wrote to Mithobius (physician and mathematician Burkard Mithob of Feldkirch) on 16 October 1541 condemning the theory and calling for it to be repressed by governmental force, writing "certain people believe it is a marvelous achievement to extol so crazy a thing, like that Polish astronomer who makes the earth move and the sun stand still. Really, wise governments ought to repress impudence of mind."[114] It had appeared to Rheticus that Melanchton would understand the theory and would be open to it. This was because Melanchton had taught Ptolemaic astronomy and had even recommended his friend Rheticus to an appointment to the Deanship of the Faculty of Arts & Sciences at the University of Wittenberg after he had returned from studying with Copernicus.[115]

Rheticus's hopes were dashed when six years after the publication of De Revolutionibus Melanchthon published his Initia Doctrinae Physicae presenting three grounds to reject Copernicanism. These were "the evidence of the senses, the thousand-year consensus of men of science, and the authority of the Bible".[116] Blasting the new theory Melanchthon wrote, "Out of love for novelty or in order to make a show of their cleverness, some people have argued that the earth moves. They maintain that neither the eighth sphere nor the sun moves, whereas they attribute motion to the other celestial spheres, and also place the earth among the heavenly bodies. Nor were these jokes invented recently. There is still extant Archimedes's book on The Sand Reckoner; in which he reports that Aristarchus of Samos propounded the paradox that the sun stands still and the earth revolves around the sun. Even though subtle experts institute many investigations for the sake of exercising their ingenuity, nevertheless public proclamation of absurd opinions is indecent and sets a harmful example."[114] Melanchthon went on to cite Bible passages and then declare "Encouraged by this divine evidence, let us cherish the truth and let us not permit ourselves to be alienated from it by the tricks of those who deem it an intellectual honor to introduce confusion into the arts."[114] In the first edition of Initia Doctrinae Physicae, Melanchthon even questioned Copernicus's character claiming his motivation was "either from love of novelty or from desire to appear clever", these more personal attacks were largely removed by the second edition in 1550.[116]

 
Copernicus's 2010 gravestone in Frombork Cathedral

Another Protestant theologian who disparaged heliocentrism on scriptural grounds was John Owen. In a passing remark in an essay on the origin of the sabbath, he characterised "the late hypothesis, fixing the sun as in the centre of the world" as being "built on fallible phenomena, and advanced by many arbitrary presumptions against evident testimonies of Scripture."[117]

In Roman Catholic circles, Copernicus's book was incorporated into scholarly curricula throughout the 16th century. For example, at the University of Salamanca in 1561 it became one of four text books that students of astronomy could choose from, and in 1594 it was made mandatory.[118] German Jesuit Nicolaus Serarius was one of the first Catholics to write against Copernicus's theory as heretical, citing the Joshua passage, in a work published in 1609–1610, and again in a book in 1612.[119] In his 12 April 1615 letter to a Catholic defender of Copernicus, Paolo Antonio Foscarini, Catholic Cardinal Robert Bellarmine condemned Copernican theory, writing "...not only the Holy Fathers, but also the modern commentaries on Genesis, the Psalms, Ecclesiastes, and Joshua, you will find all agreeing in the literal interpretation that the sun is in heaven and turns around the earth with great speed, and that the earth is very far from heaven and sits motionless at the center of the world...Nor can one answer that this is not a matter of faith, since if it is not a matter of faith 'as regards the topic,' it is a matter of faith 'as regards the speaker': and so it would be heretical to say that Abraham did not have two children and Jacob twelve, as well as to say that Christ was not born of a virgin, because both are said by the Holy Spirit through the mouth of prophets and apostles."[120] One year later, the Roman Inquisition prohibited Copernicus's work. Nevertheless, the Spanish Inquisition never banned the De revolutionibus, which continued to be taught at Salamanca.[118]

Ingoli

Perhaps the most influential opponent of the Copernican theory was Francesco Ingoli, a Catholic priest. Ingoli wrote a January 1616 essay to Galileo presenting more than twenty arguments against the Copernican theory.[121] Though "it is not certain, it is probable that he [Ingoli] was commissioned by the Inquisition to write an expert opinion on the controversy",[122] (after the Congregation of the Index's decree against Copernicanism on 5 March 1616, Ingoli was officially appointed its consultant).[122] Galileo himself was of the opinion that the essay played an important role in the rejection of the theory by church authorities, writing in a later letter to Ingoli that he was concerned that people thought the theory was rejected because Ingoli was right.[121] Ingoli presented five physical arguments against the theory, thirteen mathematical arguments (plus a separate discussion of the sizes of stars), and four theological arguments. The physical and mathematical arguments were of uneven quality, but many of them came directly from the writings of Tycho Brahe, and Ingoli repeatedly cited Brahe, the leading astronomer of the era. These included arguments about the effect of a moving Earth on the trajectory of projectiles, and about parallax and Brahe's argument that the Copernican theory required that stars be absurdly large.[123]

Two of Ingoli's theological issues with the Copernican theory were "common Catholic beliefs not directly traceable to Scripture: the doctrine that hell is located at the center of Earth and is most distant from heaven; and the explicit assertion that Earth is motionless in a hymn sung on Tuesdays as part of the Liturgy of the Hours of the Divine Office prayers regularly recited by priests."[124] Ingoli cited Robert Bellarmine in regards to both of these arguments, and may have been trying to convey to Galileo a sense of Bellarmine's opinion.[125] Ingoli also cited Genesis 1:14 where God places "lights in the firmament of the heavens to divide the day from the night." Ingoli did not think the central location of the Sun in the Copernican theory was compatible with it being described as one of the lights placed in the firmament.[124] Like previous commentators Ingoli also pointed to the passages about the Battle of Gibeon. He dismissed arguments that they should be taken metaphorically, saying "Replies which assert that Scripture speaks according to our mode of understanding are not satisfactory: both because in explaining the Sacred Writings the rule is always to preserve the literal sense, when it is possible, as it is in this case; and also because all the [Church] Fathers unanimously take this passage to mean that the Sun which was truly moving stopped at Joshua's request. An interpretation that is contrary to the unanimous consent of the Fathers is condemned by the Council of Trent, Session IV, in the decree on the edition and use of the Sacred Books. Furthermore, although the Council speaks about matters of faith and morals, nevertheless it cannot be denied that the Holy Fathers would be displeased with an interpretation of Sacred Scriptures which is contrary to their common agreement."[124] However, Ingoli closed the essay by suggesting Galileo respond primarily to the better of his physical and mathematical arguments rather than to his theological arguments, writing "Let it be your choice to respond to this either entirely of in part—clearly at least to the mathematical and physical arguments, and not to all even of these, but to the more weighty ones."[126] When Galileo wrote a letter in reply to Ingoli years later, he in fact only addressed the mathematical and physical arguments.[126]

In March 1616, in connection with the Galileo affair, the Roman Catholic Church's Congregation of the Index issued a decree suspending De revolutionibus until it could be "corrected," on the grounds of ensuring that Copernicanism, which it described as a "false Pythagorean doctrine, altogether contrary to the Holy Scripture," would not "creep any further to the prejudice of Catholic truth."[127] The corrections consisted largely of removing or altering wording that spoke of heliocentrism as a fact, rather than a hypothesis.[128] The corrections were made based largely on work by Ingoli.[122]

Galileo

On the orders of Pope Paul V, Cardinal Robert Bellarmine gave Galileo prior notice that the decree was about to be issued, and warned him that he could not "hold or defend" the Copernican doctrine.[u] The corrections to De revolutionibus, which omitted or altered nine sentences, were issued four years later, in 1620.[129]

In 1633, Galileo Galilei was convicted of grave suspicion of heresy for "following the position of Copernicus, which is contrary to the true sense and authority of Holy Scripture",[130] and was placed under house arrest for the rest of his life.[131][132]

At the instance of Roger Boscovich, the Catholic Church's 1758 Index of Prohibited Books omitted the general prohibition of works defending heliocentrism,[133] but retained the specific prohibitions of the original uncensored versions of De revolutionibus and Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. Those prohibitions were finally dropped from the 1835 Index.[134]

Languages, name and nationality

Languages

 
German-language letter from Copernicus to Duke Albert of Prussia, giving medical advice for George von Kunheim (1541)

Copernicus is postulated to have spoken Latin, German, and Polish with equal fluency; he also spoke Greek and Italian, and had some knowledge of Hebrew.[v][w][x][y] The vast majority of Copernicus's extant writings are in Latin, the language of European academia in his lifetime.

Arguments for German being Copernicus's native tongue are that he was born into a predominantly German-speaking urban patrician class using German, next to Latin, as language of trade and commerce in written documents,[142] and that, while studying canon law at the University of Bologna in 1496, he signed into the German natio (Natio Germanorum)—a student organization which, according to its 1497 by-laws, was open to students of all kingdoms and states whose mother-tongue was German.[143] However, according to French philosopher Alexandre Koyré, Copernicus's registration with the Natio Germanorum does not in itself imply that Copernicus considered himself German, since students from Prussia and Silesia were routinely so categorized, which carried certain privileges that made it a natural choice for German-speaking students, regardless of their ethnicity or self-identification.[143][z][aa][146]

Name

The surname Kopernik, Copernik, Koppernigk, in various spellings, is recorded in Kraków from c. 1350, apparently given to people from the village of Koperniki (prior to 1845 rendered Kopernik, Copernik, Copirnik, and Koppirnik) in the Duchy of Nysa, 10 km south of Nysa, and now 10 km north of the Polish-Czech border. Nicolaus Copernicus's great-grandfather is recorded as having received citizenship in Kraków in 1386. The toponym Kopernik (modern Koperniki) has been variously tied to the Polish word for "dill" (koper) and the German word for "copper" (Kupfer).[ab] The suffix -nik (or plural, -niki) denotes a Slavic and Polish agent noun.

As was common in the period, the spellings of both the toponym and the surname vary greatly. Copernicus "was rather indifferent about orthography".[147] During his childhood, about 1480, the name of his father (and thus of the future astronomer) was recorded in Thorn as Niclas Koppernigk.[148] At Kraków he signed himself, in Latin, Nicolaus Nicolai de Torunia (Nicolaus, son of Nicolaus, of Toruń).[ac] At Bologna, in 1496, he registered in the Matricula Nobilissimi Germanorum Collegii, resp. Annales Clarissimae Nacionis Germanorum, of the Natio Germanica Bononiae, as Dominus Nicolaus Kopperlingk de Thorn – IX grosseti.[150][151] At Padua he signed himself "Nicolaus Copernik", later "Coppernicus".[147] The astronomer thus Latinized his name to Coppernicus, generally with two "p"s (in 23 of 31 documents studied),[152] but later in life he used a single "p". On the title page of De revolutionibus, Rheticus published the name (in the genitive, or possessive, case) as "Nicolai Copernici".

Nationality

There has been discussion of Copernicus's nationality and of whether it is meaningful to ascribe to him a nationality in the modern sense.

Nicolaus Copernicus was born and raised in Royal Prussia, a semiautonomous and multilingual region of the Kingdom of Poland.[153][154] He was the child of German-speaking parents and grew up with German as his mother tongue.[155][156][157] His first alma mater was the University of Kraków in Poland. When he later studied in Italy, at the University of Bologna, he joined the German Nation, a student organization for German-speakers of all allegiances (Germany would not become a nation-state until 1871).[158][159] His family stood against the Teutonic Order and actively supported the city of Toruń during the Thirteen Years' War. Copernicus's father lent money to Poland's King Casimir IV Jagiellon to finance the war against the Teutonic Knights,[160] but the inhabitants of Royal Prussia also resisted the Polish crown's efforts for greater control over the region.[153]

Encyclopedia Americana,[161] The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia,[162] The Oxford World Encyclopedia,[163] and World Book Encyclopedia[164] refer to Copernicus as a "Polish astronomer". Sheila Rabin, writing in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, describes Copernicus as a "child of a German family [who] was a subject of the Polish crown",[10] while Manfred Weissenbacher writes that Copernicus's father was a Germanized Pole.[165]

No Polish texts by Copernicus survive due to the rarity of Polish language in literature before the writings of the Polish Renaissance poets Mikołaj Rej and Jan Kochanowski (educated Poles had generally written in Latin); but it is known that Copernicus knew Polish on a par with German and Latin.[166]

Historian Michael Burleigh describes the nationality debate as a "totally insignificant battle" between German and Polish scholars during the interwar period.[167] Polish astronomer Konrad Rudnicki calls the discussion a "fierce scholarly quarrel in ... times of nationalism" and describes Copernicus as an inhabitant of a German-speaking territory that belonged to Poland, himself being of mixed Polish-German extraction.[168]

Czesław Miłosz describes the debate as an "absurd" projection of a modern understanding of nationality onto Renaissance people, who identified with their home territories rather than with a nation.[169] Similarly, historian Norman Davies writes that Copernicus, as was common in his era, was "largely indifferent" to nationality, being a local patriot who considered himself "Prussian".[170] Miłosz and Davies both write that Copernicus had a German-language cultural background, while his working language was Latin in accord with the usage of the time.[169][170] Additionally, according to Davies, "there is ample evidence that he knew the Polish language".[170] Davies concludes that, "Taking everything into consideration, there is good reason to regard him both as a German and as a Pole: and yet, in the sense that modern nationalists understand it, he was neither."[170]

Commemoration

Orbiting Astronomical Observatory 3

The third in NASA's Orbiting Astronomical Observatory series of missions, launched on 21 August 1972, was named Copernicus after its successful launch. The satellite carried an X-ray detector and an ultraviolet telescope, and operated until February 1981.

Copernicia

 
Bust by Schadow, 1807, in the Walhalla memorial
 
Statue of Copernicus outside of Frombork Cathedral

Copernicia, a genus of palm trees native to South America and the Greater Antilles, was named after Copernicus in 1837. In some of the species, the leaves are coated with a thin layer of wax, known as carnauba wax.

Copernicium

On 14 July 2009, the discoverers, from the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt, Germany, of chemical element 112 (temporarily named ununbium) proposed to the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) that its permanent name be "copernicium" (symbol Cn). "After we had named elements after our city and our state, we wanted to make a statement with a name that was known to everyone," said Hofmann. "We didn't want to select someone who was a German. We were looking world-wide."[171] On the 537th anniversary of his birthday the name became official.[172]

55 Cancri A

In July 2014 the International Astronomical Union launched NameExoWorlds, a process for giving proper names to certain exoplanets and their host stars.[173] The process involved public nomination and voting for the new names.[174] In December 2015, the IAU announced the winning name for 55 Cancri A was Copernicus.[175]

Poland

Copernicus is commemorated by the Nicolaus Copernicus Monument in Warsaw, designed by Bertel Thorvaldsen (1822), completed in 1830; and by Jan Matejko's 1873 painting, Astronomer Copernicus, or Conversations with God.

Named for Copernicus are Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń; Warsaw's Copernicus Science Centre; Copernicus Hospital, in Poland's third largest city, Łódź; and Wrocław International Airport (Copernicus Airport Wrocław).

A Copernicus Award has been established jointly by the Foundation for Polish Science and the German Research Foundation, to promote Polish-German scientific cooperation.

Influence

Contemporary literary and artistic works inspired by Copernicus include:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The oldest known portrait of Copernicus is that on the Strasbourg astronomical clock, made by Tobias Stimmer c. 1571–74. According to the inscription next to that portrait, it was made from a self-portrait by Copernicus himself. This has led to speculation that the Toruń portrait, whose provenance is unknown, may be a copy based on the same self-portrait.[1]
  2. ^ Modern pronunciation of the Polish form of the name: [miˈkɔwaj kɔˈpɛrɲik] ( listen).
  3. ^ a b The Greek mathematician and astronomer Aristarchus of Samos proposed such a system during the third century BCE (Dreyer 1953, pp. 135–48).In an early unpublished manuscript of De Revolutionibus (which still survives today in the Jagiellonian Library in Kraków), Copernicus wrote that "It is credible that ... Philolaus believed in the mobility of the Earth and some even say that Aristarchus was of that opinion", a passage that was removed from the published edition, a decision described by Owen Gingerich as "eminently sensible" "from an editorial viewpoint".[6] Philolaus was not a heliocentrist as he thought that both the Earth and the Sun moved around a central fire. Gingerich says that there is no evidence that Copernicus was aware of the few clear references to Aristarchus's heliocentrism in ancient texts (as distinct from one other unclear and confusing one), especially Archimedes's The Sand-Reckoner (which was not in print until the year after Copernicus died), and that it would have been in his interest to mention them had he known of them, before concluding that he developed his idea and its justification independently of Aristarchus.[6]
  4. ^ Dava Sobel (2011) writes: "Copernicus had no idea that Aristarchus of Samos had proposed much the same thing [as Copernicus was contemplating by 1510, when he wrote his Brief Sketch, otherwise also known as the Commentariolus] in the third century B.C. The only work by Aristarchus known to Copernicus—a treatise called On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon—made no mention of a heliocentric plan." Sobel (2011) pp. 18–19. Sobel further writes that in Copernicus's dedication of On the Revolutions to Pope Paul III—which Copernicus hoped would dampen criticism of his heliocentric theory by "babblers... completely ignorant of [astronomy]"—the book's author wrote that, in rereading all of philosophy, in the pages of Cicero and Plutarch he had found references to those few thinkers who dared to move the Earth "against the traditional opinion of astronomers and almost against common sense." Sobel comments: "He still knew nothing of the Earth-moving plan of Aristarchus, which had not yet been reported to Latin audiences" (pp. 179–82).
  5. ^ a b George Kish (1978) argues that Copernicus knew about Aristarchus's heliocentric theory, saying: "Copernicus himself admitted that the theory was attributed to Aristarchus, though this does not seem to be generally known. ... it is a curious fact that Copernicus did mention the theory of Aristarchus in a passage which he later suppressed."[72]
  6. ^ "Copernicus seems to have drawn up some notes [on the displacement of good coin from circulation by debased coin] while he was at Olsztyn in 1519. He made them the basis of a report on the matter, written in German, which he presented to the Prussian Diet held in 1522 at Grudziądz... He later drew up a revised and enlarged version of his little treatise, this time in Latin, and setting forth a general theory of money, for presentation to the Diet of 1528."[8]
  7. ^ "The name of the village, not unlike that of the astronomer's family, has been variously spelled. A large German atlas of Silesia, published by Wieland in Nuremberg in 1731, spells it Kopernik."[13]
  8. ^ "In 1512, Bishop Watzenrode died suddenly after attending King Sigismund's wedding feast in Kraków. Rumors abounded that the bishop had been poisoned by agents of his long-time foe, the Teutonic Knights."[20]
  9. ^ "[Watzenrode] was also firm, and the Teutonic Knights, who remained a constant menace, did not like him at all; the Grand Master of the order once described him as 'the devil incarnate'. [Watzenrode] was the trusted friend and advisor of three [Polish] kings in succession: John Albert, Alexander (not to be confused with the poisoning pope), and Sigismund; and his influence greatly strengthened the ties between Warmia and Poland proper."[21]
  10. ^ "To obtain for his nephews [Nicolaus and Andreas] the necessary support [for their studies in Italy], the bishop [Lucas Watzenrode the Younger] procured their election as canons by the chapter of Frauenburg (1497–1498)."[25]
  11. ^ Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969) describe Copernicus having attended school at Włocławek as unlikely.[11]
  12. ^ Translated to English, it reads: "Here, where stood the house of Domenico Maria Novara, professor of the ancient Studium of Bologna, NICOLAUS COPERNICUS, the Polish mathematician and astronomer who would revolutionize concepts of the universe, conducted brilliant celestial observations with his teacher in 1497–1500. Placed on the 5th centenary of [Copernicus's] birth by the City, the University, the Academy of Sciences of the Institute of Bologna, the Polish Academy of Sciences. 1473 [–] 1973."
  13. ^ Copernicus's brother Andreas would, before the end of 1512, develop leprosy and be forced to leave Warmia for Italy. In November 1518 Copernicus would learn that his brother had died.[36]
  14. ^ This was based on sketch by Tobias Stimmer (c. 1570), and allegedly based on a self-portrait by Copernicus. It inspired most later Copernicus depictions.[48]
  15. ^ A reference to the "Commentariolus" is contained in a library catalogue, dated 1 May 1514, of a 16th-century historian, Matthew of Miechów, so it must have begun circulating before that date (Koyré, 1973, p. 85; Gingerich, 2004, p. 32). Thoren (1990 p. 99) gives the length of the manuscript as 40 pages.
  16. ^ Koyré (1973, pp. 27, 90) and Rosen (1995, pp. 64, 184) take the view that Copernicus was indeed concerned about possible objections from theologians, while Lindberg and Numbers (1986) argue against it. Koestler (1963) also denies it. Indirect evidence that Copernicus was concerned about objections from theologians comes from a letter written to him by Andreas Osiander in 1541, in which Osiander advises Copernicus to adopt a proposal by which he says "you will be able to appease the Peripatetics and theologians whose opposition you fear". (Koyré, 1973, pp. 35, 90)
  17. ^ According to Bell 1992, p. 111, "... Copernicus, on his deathbed, received the printer's proofs of his epoch-breaking Dē revolutionibus orbium coelestium."
  18. ^ Koestler 1963, page 189, says the following about a letter from Canon Tiedemann Giese to Georg Joachim Rheticus: "[…] the end came only after several months, on 24 May. In a letter to Rheticus, written a few weeks later, Giese recorded the event in a single, tragic sentence: 'For many days he had been deprived of his memory and mental vigour; he only saw his completed book at the last moment, on the day he died.'" Koestler attributes this quotation to Leopold Prowe, Nicolaus Copernicus, Berlin 1883–1884, volume 1, part 2, p. 554.
  19. ^ Rosen (1995, pp. 187–92), originally published in 1967 in Saggi su Galileo Galilei . Rosen is particularly scathing about this and other statements in The Sleepwalkers, which he criticizes as inaccurate.
  20. ^ The original painting was looted, and possibly destroyed, by the Germans in World War II during the occupation of Poland.
  21. ^ Fantoli (2005, pp. 118–19); Finocchiaro (1989, pp. 148, 153). On-line copies of Finocchiaro's translations of the relevant documents, and , have been made available by Gagné (2005). This notice of the decree would not have prevented Galileo from discussing heliocentrism solely as a mathematical hypothesis, but a stronger (Finocchiaro, 1989, pp. 147–48) not to teach it "in any way whatever, either orally or in writing", allegedly issued to him by the Commissary of the Holy Office, Father Michelangelo Segizzi, would certainly have done so (Fantoli, 2005, pp. 119–20, 137). There has been much controversy over whether the copy of this injunction in the Vatican archives is authentic; if so, whether it was ever issued; and if so, whether it was legally valid (Fantoli, 2005, pp. 120–43).
  22. ^ "He spoke German, Polish and Latin with equal fluency as well as Italian."[135]
  23. ^ "He spoke Polish, Latin, and Greek."[136]
  24. ^ "He was a linguist with a command of Polish, German and Latin, and he possessed also a knowledge of Greek rare at that period in northeastern Europe and probably had some acquaintance with Italian and Hebrew."[137]
  25. ^ He used Latin and German, knew enough Greek to translate the 7th-century Byzantine poet Theophylact Simocatta's verses into Latin prose,[44] and "there is ample evidence that he knew the Polish language."[138] Edward Rosen mentions that Copernicus recorded Polish farm tenants' names inconsistently, gainsaying that he was fluent in the Polish language.[139] (But decades after Copernicus, each of William Shakespeare's extant autograph signatures showed a different spelling.[140]) During his several years' studies in Italy, Copernicus presumably learned some Italian; Professor Stefan Melkowski of Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń asserts that Copernicus also spoke both German and Polish.[141]
  26. ^ "Although great importance has frequently been ascribed to this fact, it does not imply that Copernicus considered himself to be a German. The 'nationes' of a medieval university had nothing in common with nations in the modern sense of the word. Students who were natives of Prussia and Silesia were automatically described as belonging to the Natio Germanorum. Furthmore, at Bologna, this was the 'privileged' nation; consequently, Copernicus had very good reason for inscribing himself on its register."[144]
  27. ^ "It is important to recognize, however, that the medieval Latin concept of natio, or "nation", referred to the community of feudal lords both in Germany and elsewhere, not to 'the people' in the nineteenth-century democratic or nationalistic sense of the word."[145]
  28. ^ These interpretations date to the dispute about Copernicus's (Polish vs. German) ethnicity, which had been open since the 1870s, and the "copper" vs. "dill" interpretations go back to the 19th century (Magazin für die Literatur des Auslandes, 1875, 534 f), but the dispute became virulent again in the 1960s, culminating in a controversy between E. Mosko ("copper") and S. Rospond ("dill") in 1963–64, summarized by Zygmunt Brocki, "Wsrôd publikacji o etymologii nazwiska Mikotaja Kopernika ["Some Publications on the Etymology of the Surname of Nicholaus Copernicus"], Komunikaty mazur.-warm., 1970.
  29. ^ "In the [enrollment] documents still in existence we find the entry: Nicolaus Nicolai de Torunia."[149]

References

  1. ^ André Goddu, Copernicus and the Aristotelian Tradition (2010), p. 436 (note 125), citing Goddu, review of Jerzy Gassowski, "Poszukiwanie grobu Mikołaja Kopernika" ("Search for Grave of Nicolaus Copernicus"), in Journal for the History of Astronomy, 38.2 (May 2007), p. 255.
  2. ^ Jones, Daniel (2003) [1917], Roach, Peter; Hartmann, James; Setter, Jane (eds.), English Pronouncing Dictionary, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-3-12-539683-8
  3. ^ "Copernicus". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d.
  4. ^ "Copernicus". Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
  5. ^ Linton 2004, pp. 39, 119.
  6. ^ a b Owen Gingerich, "Did Copernicus Owe a Debt to Aristarchus?", Journal for the History of Astronomy, vol. 16, no. 1 (February 1985), pp. 37–42. "There is no question but that Aristarchus had the priority of the heliocentric idea. Yet there is no evidence that Copernicus owed him anything.(!9) As far as we can tell both the idea and its justification were found independently by Copernicus."
  7. ^ Edward Rosen, "Copernicus, Nicolaus", Encyclopedia Americana, International Edition, volume 7, Danbury, Connecticut, Grolier Incorporated, 1986, ISBN 0-7172-0117-1, pp. 755–56.
  8. ^ Angus Armitage, The World of Copernicus, 1951, p. 91.
  9. ^ Iłowiecki, Maciej (1981). Dzieje nauki polskiej (in Polish). Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Interpress. p. 40. ISBN 978-83-223-1876-8.
  10. ^ a b Sheila Rabin. "Nicolaus Copernicus". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 22 April 2007.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), p. 4.
  12. ^ John Freely, Celestial Revolutionary, I.B. Tauris, 2014 pp. 103–04, 110–13 ISBN 978-1780763507
  13. ^ Mizwa, p. 36.
  14. ^ a b c d e Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), p. 3.
  15. ^ Bieńkowska (1973), p. 15
  16. ^ Rybka (1973), p. 23.
  17. ^ Sakolsky (2005), p. 8.
  18. ^ Biskup (1973), p. 16
  19. ^ Mizwa, 1943, p. 38.
  20. ^ Hirshfeld, p. 38.
  21. ^ Moore (1994), pp. 52, 62.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), p. 5.
  23. ^ Wojciech Iwanczak (1998). "Watzenrode, Lucas". In Bautz, Traugott (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 13. Herzberg: Bautz. col. 389–93. ISBN 3-88309-072-7.
  24. ^ Moore (1994), p. 62.
  25. ^ "Nicolaus Copernicus" , New Advent (online version of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia). Retrieved 9 June 2013.
  26. ^ a b c Czesław Miłosz, The History of Polish Literature, p. 38.
  27. ^ Angus Armitage, The World of Copernicus, p. 55.
  28. ^ Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), pp. 4–5.
  29. ^ Sobel (2011), pp. 7, 232.
  30. ^ Jerzy Dobrzycki and Leszek Hajdukiewicz, "Kopernik, Mikołaj", Polski słownik biograficzny (Polish Biographical Dictionary), vol. XIV, Wrocław, Polish Academy of Sciences, 1969, p. 5.
  31. ^ Rosen, Ed (December 1960). (PDF). Proc. Am. Philos. Soc. 104 (6). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 October 2013.
  32. ^ Rosen, Edward (1995). "Chapter 6: Copernicus' Alleged Priesthood". In Hilfstein, Erna (ed.). Copernicus and his successors. UK: The Hambledon Press. pp. 47–56. Bibcode:1995cops.book.....R. ISBN 978-1-85285-071-5. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  33. ^ Hagen, J. (1908). "Nicolaus Copernicus". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  34. ^ Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), pp. 5–6.
  35. ^ a b c d e f g h Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), p. 6.
  36. ^ Sobel (2011), pp. 26, 34, 40.
  37. ^ Rabin (2005).
  38. ^ Gingerich (2004, pp. 187–89, 201); Koyré (1973, p. 94); Kuhn (1957, p. 93); Rosen (2004, p. 123); Rabin (2005). Robbins (1964, p. x), however, includes Copernicus among a list of Renaissance astronomers who "either practiced astrology themselves or countenanced its practice".
  39. ^ "Nicolaus Copernicus Gesamtausgabe Bd. VI: Urkunden, Akten und NachrichtenDocumenta Copernicana – Urkunden, Akten und Nachrichten, alle erhaltenen Urkunden und Akten zur Familiengeschichte, zur Biographie und Tätigkeitsfeldern von Copernicus, 1996, ISBN 978-3-05-003009-8 [5], pp. 62–63.
  40. ^ Studia Copernicana 16
  41. ^ Sparavigna, Ameila Carolina (2017). "Stellarium software and the occultation of Aldebaran observed by Copernicus". HAL. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  42. ^ "Nicolaus Copernicus – Biography".
  43. ^ Sedlar (1994).
  44. ^ a b Angus Armitage, The World of Copernicus, pp. 75–77.
  45. ^ a b c d e Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), p. 7.
  46. ^ Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), pp. 7–8.
  47. ^ Repcheck (2007), p. 66.
  48. ^ a b Andreas Kühne, Stefan Kirschner, Biographia Copernicana: Die Copernicus-Biographien des 16. bis 18. Jahrhunderts (2004), p. 14
  49. ^ Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), p. 9.
  50. ^ Volckart, Oliver (1997). "Early Beginnings of the Quantity Theory of Money and Their Context in Polish and Prussian Monetary Policies, c. 1520–1550". The Economic History Review. New Series. 50 (3): 430–49. doi:10.1111/1468-0289.00063.
  51. ^ a b c d e f Repcheck (2007), pp. 78–79, 184, 186.
  52. ^ a b c Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz (1969), p. 11.
  53. ^ Angus Armitage, The World of Copernicus, pp. 97–98.
  54. ^ Angus Armitage, The World of Copernicus, p. 98.
  55. ^ Kuhn, 1957, pp. 187–88.
  56. ^ Goddu (2010: 245–46)
  57. ^ "Nicholas Copernicus | Calendars". www.webexhibits.org.
  58. ^ Freely, "Celestial Revolutionary" p. 149
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External links

Primary sources

  • Works by Nicolaus Copernicus at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Nicolaus Copernicus at Internet Archive
  • Works by Nicolaus Copernicus at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • De Revolutionibus, autograph manuscript – Full digital facsimile, Jagiellonian University
  • (in Polish) Polish translations of letters written by Copernicus in Latin or German 18 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  • Online Galleries, History of Science Collections, University of Oklahoma Libraries 21 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine High resolution images of works by and/or portraits of Nicolaus Copernicus in .jpg and .tiff format.
  • Works by Nicolaus Copernicus in digital library Polona

General

  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Nicolaus Copernicus", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews
  • Nicolaus Copernicus at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • Copernicus in Torun
  • Copernicus House, District Museum in Toruń
  • Nicolaus Copernicus Thorunensis by the Copernican Academic Portal
  • Clerke, Agnes Mary (1911). "Copernicus, Nicolaus" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). pp. 100–101.
  • Portraits of Copernicus: Copernicus's face reconstructed; Portrait 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine;
  • Copernicus and Astrology 21 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry
  • 'Body of Copernicus' identified – BBC article including image of Copernicus using facial reconstruction based on located skull
  • Nicolaus Copernicus on the 1000 Polish Zloty banknote.
  • Copernicus's model for Mars
  • Retrograde Motion
  • Copernicus's explanation for retrograde motion
  • Geometry of Maximum Elongation
  • Copernican Model

About De Revolutionibus

  • The Copernican Universe from the De Revolutionibus
  • De Revolutionibus, 1543 first edition – Full digital facsimile, Lehigh University
  • The text of the De Revolutionibus
  • Digitized edition of De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium (1543) with annotations of Michael Maestlin on e-rara

Prizes

  • , awarded since 1995

German-Polish cooperation

  • (in English, German, and Polish) German-Polish "Copernicus Prize" awarded to German and Polish scientists (DFG website)
  • (in English, German, and Polish) Büro Kopernikus – An initiative of German Federal Cultural Foundation
  • (in German and Polish) German-Polish school project on Copernicus

nicolaus, copernicus, copernicus, kopernik, redirect, here, other, uses, copernicus, disambiguation, ɜːr, polish, mikołaj, kopernik, middle, german, niklas, koppernigk, german, nikolaus, kopernikus, february, 1473, 1543, renaissance, polymath, active, mathemat. Copernicus and Kopernik redirect here For other uses see Copernicus disambiguation Nicolaus Copernicus k oʊ ˈ p ɜːr n ɪ k e s k e 2 3 4 Polish Mikolaj Kopernik b Middle Low German Niklas Koppernigk German Nikolaus Kopernikus 19 February 1473 24 May 1543 was a Renaissance polymath active as a mathematician astronomer and Catholic canon who formulated a model of the universe that placed the Sun rather than Earth at its center In all likelihood Copernicus developed his model independently of Aristarchus of Samos an ancient Greek astronomer who had formulated such a model some eighteen centuries earlier 5 c d e Nicolaus CopernicusThe Torun portrait anonymous c 1580 a Born19 February 1473Thorn Royal Prussia PolandDied24 May 1543 aged 70 Frauenburg Royal Prussia PolandEducationUniversity of Krakow 1491 1495 University of Bologna 1496 1500 University of Padua 1501 1503 University of Ferrara DCanL 1503 Known forHeliocentrismQuantity theory of moneyGresham Copernicus lawScientific careerFieldsAstronomyCanon lawEconomicsMathematicsMedicinePoliticsAcademic advisorsDomenico Maria Novara da FerraraInfluencesAristotleAverroesEuclidHaly AbenragelRegiomontanusInfluencedJohannes KeplerSignatureThe publication of Copernicus s model in his book De revolutionibus orbium coelestium On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres just before his death in 1543 was a major event in the history of science triggering the Copernican Revolution and making a pioneering contribution to the Scientific Revolution 7 Copernicus was born and died in Royal Prussia a region that had been part of the Kingdom of Poland since 1466 A polyglot and polymath he obtained a doctorate in canon law and was a mathematician astronomer physician classics scholar translator governor diplomat and economist From 1497 he was a Warmian Cathedral chapter canon In 1517 he derived a quantity theory of money a key concept in economics and in 1519 he formulated an economic principle that later came to be called Gresham s law f Contents 1 Life 1 1 Father s family 1 2 Mother s family 1 3 Education 1 3 1 In Poland 1 3 1 1 University of Krakow 1491 95 1 3 1 1 1 Mathematical astronomy 1 3 1 1 2 Contradictions in the systems of Aristotle and Ptolemy 1 3 1 2 Warmia 1495 96 1 3 2 In Italy 1 3 2 1 University of Bologna 1496 1501 1 3 2 2 Rome 1500 1 3 2 3 University of Padua 1501 03 1 3 2 3 1 Astrology 1 3 2 3 2 Greek studies 1 4 Planetary observations 1 5 Other observations 1 6 Work 1 6 1 Commentariolus an initial outline of a heliocentric theory 1 6 2 Astronomical observations 1513 16 1 6 3 Administrative duties in Warmia 1 6 3 1 Advisor on monetary reform 1 6 4 Copernican system presented to the Pope 1 6 5 Medical work 1 6 6 Protestant attacks on the Copernican system 1 7 Heliocentrism 1 7 1 Reception of the Copernican system in Rome 1 8 De revolutionibus orbium coelestium 1 9 Death 2 Copernican system 2 1 Predecessors 2 2 Copernicus 2 3 Successors 3 Controversy 3 1 Tolosani 3 2 Theology 3 3 Ingoli 3 4 Galileo 4 Languages name and nationality 4 1 Languages 4 2 Name 4 3 Nationality 5 Commemoration 5 1 Orbiting Astronomical Observatory 3 5 2 Copernicia 5 3 Copernicium 5 4 55 Cancri A 5 5 Poland 5 6 Influence 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 External linksLife Copernicus s Torun birthplace ul Kopernika 15 left Together with no 17 right it forms Muzeum Mikolaja Kopernika Nicolaus Copernicus was born on 19 February 1473 in the city of Torun Thorn in the province of Royal Prussia in the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland 9 10 His father was a merchant from Krakow and his mother was the daughter of a wealthy Torun merchant 11 Nicolaus was the youngest of four children His brother Andreas Andrew became an Augustinian canon at Frombork Frauenburg 11 His sister Barbara named after her mother became a Benedictine nun and in her final years prioress of a convent in Chelmno Kulm she died after 1517 11 His sister Katharina married the businessman and Torun city councilor Barthel Gertner and left five children whom Copernicus looked after to the end of his life 11 Copernicus never married and is not known to have had children but from at least 1531 until 1539 his relations with Anna Schilling a live in housekeeper were seen as scandalous by two bishops of Warmia who urged him over the years to break off relations with his mistress 12 Father s family Copernicus s father s family can be traced to a village in Silesia between Nysa Neisse and Prudnik Neustadt The village s name has been variously spelled Kopernik g Copernik Copernic Kopernic Coprirnik and today Koperniki 14 In the 14th century members of the family began moving to various other Silesian cities to the Polish capital Krakow 1367 and to Torun 1400 14 The father Mikolaj the Elder likely the son of Jan came from the Krakow line 14 Nicolaus was named after his father who appears in records for the first time as a well to do merchant who dealt in copper selling it mostly in Danzig Gdansk 15 16 He moved from Krakow to Torun around 1458 17 Torun situated on the Vistula River was at that time embroiled in the Thirteen Years War in which the Kingdom of Poland and the Prussian Confederation an alliance of Prussian cities gentry and clergy fought the Teutonic Order over control of the region In this war Hanseatic cities like Danzig and Torun Nicolaus Copernicus s hometown chose to support the Polish King Casimir IV Jagiellon who promised to respect the cities traditional vast independence which the Teutonic Order had challenged Nicolaus s father was actively engaged in the politics of the day and supported Poland and the cities against the Teutonic Order 18 In 1454 he mediated negotiations between Poland s Cardinal Zbigniew Olesnicki and the Prussian cities for repayment of war loans 14 In the Second Peace of Thorn 1466 the Teutonic Order formally relinquished all claims to its western province which as Royal Prussia remained a region of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland until the First 1772 and Second 1793 Partitions of Poland Copernicus s father married Barbara Watzenrode the astronomer s mother between 1461 and 1464 14 He died about 1483 11 Mother s family Nicolaus s mother Barbara Watzenrode was the daughter of a wealthy Torun patrician and city councillor Lucas Watzenrode the Elder deceased 1462 and Katarzyna widow of Jan Peckau mentioned in other sources as Katarzyna Rudiger gente Modlibog deceased 1476 11 The Modlibogs were a prominent Polish family who had been well known in Poland s history since 1271 19 The Watzenrode family like the Kopernik family had come from Silesia from near Swidnica Schweidnitz and after 1360 had settled in Torun They soon became one of the wealthiest and most influential patrician families 11 Through the Watzenrodes extensive family relationships by marriage Copernicus was related to wealthy families of Torun Thorn Gdansk Danzig and Elblag Elbing and to prominent Polish noble families of Prussia the Czapskis Dzialynskis Konopackis and Koscieleckis 11 Lucas and Katherine had three children Lucas Watzenrode the Younger 1447 1512 who would become Bishop of Warmia and Copernicus s patron Barbara the astronomer s mother deceased after 1495 and Christina deceased before 1502 who in 1459 married the Torun merchant and mayor Tiedeman von Allen 11 Copernicus s maternal uncle Lucas Watzenrode the Younger Lucas Watzenrode the Elder a wealthy merchant and in 1439 62 president of the judicial bench was a decided opponent of the Teutonic Knights 11 In 1453 he was the delegate from Torun at the Grudziadz Graudenz conference that planned the uprising against them 11 During the ensuing Thirteen Years War he actively supported the Prussian cities war effort with substantial monetary subsidies only part of which he later re claimed with political activity in Torun and Danzig and by personally fighting in battles at Lasin Lessen and Malbork Marienburg 11 He died in 1462 11 Lucas Watzenrode the Younger the astronomer s maternal uncle and patron was educated at the University of Krakow now Jagiellonian University and at the universities of Cologne and Bologna He was a bitter opponent of the Teutonic Order h and its Grand Master once referred to him as the devil incarnate i In 1489 Watzenrode was elected Bishop of Warmia Ermeland Ermland against the preference of King Casimir IV who had hoped to install his own son in that seat 22 As a result Watzenrode quarreled with the king until Casimir IV s death three years later 23 Watzenrode was then able to form close relations with three successive Polish monarchs John I Albert Alexander Jagiellon and Sigismund I the Old He was a friend and key advisor to each ruler and his influence greatly strengthened the ties between Warmia and Poland proper 24 Watzenrode came to be considered the most powerful man in Warmia and his wealth connections and influence allowed him to secure Copernicus s education and career as a canon at Frombork Cathedral 22 j Education In Poland Upon his father s death young Nicolaus s maternal uncle Lucas Watzenrode the Younger 1447 1512 took the boy under his wing and saw to his education and career 11 Watzenrode maintained contacts with leading intellectual figures in Poland and was a friend of the influential Italian born humanist and Krakow courtier Filippo Buonaccorsi 26 There are no surviving primary documents on the early years of Copernicus s childhood and education 11 Copernicus biographers assume that Watzenrode first sent young Copernicus to St John s School at Torun where he himself had been a master 11 Later according to Armitage k the boy attended the Cathedral School at Wloclawek up the Vistula River from Torun which prepared pupils for entrance to the University of Krakow Watzenrode s alma mater in Poland s capital 27 Collegium Maius at Krakow University Copernicus s Polish alma mater University of Krakow 1491 95 In the winter semester of 1491 92 Copernicus as Nicolaus Nicolai de Thuronia matriculated together with his brother Andrew at the University of Krakow now Jagiellonian University 11 Copernicus began his studies in the Department of Arts from the fall of 1491 presumably until the summer or fall of 1495 in the heyday of the Krakow astronomical mathematical school acquiring the foundations for his subsequent mathematical achievements 11 According to a later but credible tradition Jan Brozek Copernicus was a pupil of Albert Brudzewski who by then from 1491 was a professor of Aristotelian philosophy but taught astronomy privately outside the university Copernicus became familiar with Brudzewski s widely read commentary to Georg von Peuerbach s Theoricae novae planetarum and almost certainly attended the lectures of Bernard of Biskupie and Wojciech Krypa of Szamotuly and probably other astronomical lectures by Jan of Glogow Michal of Wroclaw Breslau Wojciech of Pniewy and Marcin Bylica of Olkusz 28 Mathematical astronomy Copernicus s Krakow studies gave him a thorough grounding in the mathematical astronomy taught at the university arithmetic geometry geometric optics cosmography theoretical and computational astronomy and a good knowledge of the philosophical and natural science writings of Aristotle De coelo Metaphysics and Averroes stimulating his interest in learning and making him conversant with humanistic culture 22 Copernicus broadened the knowledge that he took from the university lecture halls with independent reading of books that he acquired during his Krakow years Euclid Haly Abenragel the Alfonsine Tables Johannes Regiomontanus Tabulae directionum to this period probably also date his earliest scientific notes now preserved partly at Uppsala University 22 At Krakow Copernicus began collecting a large library on astronomy it would later be carried off as war booty by the Swedes during the Deluge in the 1650s and is now at the Uppsala University Library 29 Contradictions in the systems of Aristotle and Ptolemy Copernicus s four years at Krakow played an important role in the development of his critical faculties and initiated his analysis of logical contradictions in the two official systems of astronomy Aristotle s theory of homocentric spheres and Ptolemy s mechanism of eccentrics and epicycles the surmounting and discarding of which would be the first step toward the creation of Copernicus s own doctrine of the structure of the universe 22 Warmia 1495 96 Without taking a degree probably in the fall of 1495 Copernicus left Krakow for the court of his uncle Watzenrode who in 1489 had been elevated to Prince Bishop of Warmia and soon before November 1495 sought to place his nephew in the Warmia canonry vacated by 26 August 1495 death of its previous tenant Jan Czanow For unclear reasons probably due to opposition from part of the chapter who appealed to Rome Copernicus s installation was delayed inclining Watzenrode to send both his nephews to study canon law in Italy seemingly with a view to furthering their ecclesiastic careers and thereby also strengthening his own influence in the Warmia chapter 22 Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross and St Bartholomew in Wroclaw On 20 October 1497 Copernicus by proxy formally succeeded to the Warmia canonry which had been granted to him two years earlier To this by a document dated 10 January 1503 at Padua he would add a sinecure at the Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross and St Bartholomew in Wroclaw at the time in the Crown of Bohemia Despite having been granted a papal indult on 29 November 1508 to receive further benefices through his ecclesiastic career Copernicus not only did not acquire further prebends and higher stations prelacies at the chapter but in 1538 he relinquished the Wroclaw sinecure It is unclear whether he was ever ordained a priest 30 Edward Rosen asserts that he was not 31 32 Copernicus did take minor orders which sufficed for assuming a chapter canonry 22 The Catholic Encyclopedia proposes that his ordination was probable as in 1537 he was one of four candidates for the episcopal seat of Warmia a position that required ordination 33 In Italy University of Bologna 1496 1501 Meanwhile leaving Warmia in mid 1496 possibly with the retinue of the chapter s chancellor Jerzy Pranghe who was going to Italy in the fall possibly in October Copernicus arrived in Bologna and a few months later after 6 January 1497 signed himself into the register of the Bologna University of Jurists German nation which included young Poles from Silesia Prussia and Pomerania as well as students of other nationalities 22 During his three year stay at Bologna which occurred between fall 1496 and spring 1501 Copernicus seems to have devoted himself less keenly to studying canon law he received his doctorate in canon law only after seven years following a second return to Italy in 1503 than to studying the humanities probably attending lectures by Filippo Beroaldo Antonio Urceo called Codro Giovanni Garzoni and Alessandro Achillini and to studying astronomy He met the famous astronomer Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara and became his disciple and assistant 22 Copernicus was developing new ideas inspired by reading the Epitome of the Almagest Epitome in Almagestum Ptolemei by George von Peuerbach and Johannes Regiomontanus Venice 1496 He verified its observations about certain peculiarities in Ptolemy s theory of the Moon s motion by conducting on 9 March 1497 at Bologna a memorable observation of the occultation of Aldebaran the brightest star in the Taurus constellation by the moon Copernicus the humanist sought confirmation for his growing doubts through close reading of Greek and Latin authors Pythagoras Aristarchos of Samos Cleomedes Cicero Pliny the Elder Plutarch Philolaus Heraclides Ecphantos Plato gathering especially while at Padua fragmentary historic information about ancient astronomical cosmological and calendar systems 34 Via Galliera 65 Bologna site of house of Domenico Maria Novara Close up of plaque l Rome 1500 Copernicus spent the jubilee year 1500 in Rome where he arrived with his brother Andrew that spring doubtless to perform an apprenticeship at the Papal Curia Here too however he continued his astronomical work begun at Bologna observing for example a lunar eclipse on the night of 5 6 November 1500 According to a later account by Rheticus Copernicus also probably privately rather than at the Roman Sapienza as a Professor Mathematum professor of astronomy delivered to numerous students and leading masters of the science public lectures devoted probably to a critique of the mathematical solutions of contemporary astronomy 35 University of Padua 1501 03 On his return journey doubtless stopping briefly at Bologna in mid 1501 Copernicus arrived back in Warmia After on 28 July receiving from the chapter a two year extension of leave in order to study medicine since he may in future be a useful medical advisor to our Reverend Superior Bishop Lucas Watzenrode and the gentlemen of the chapter in late summer or in the fall he returned again to Italy probably accompanied by his brother Andrew m and by Canon Bernhard Sculteti This time he studied at the University of Padua famous as a seat of medical learning and except for a brief visit to Ferrara in May June 1503 to pass examinations for and receive his doctorate in canon law he remained at Padua from fall 1501 to summer 1503 35 Copernicus studied medicine probably under the direction of leading Padua professors Bartolomeo da Montagnana Girolamo Fracastoro Gabriele Zerbi Alessandro Benedetti and read medical treatises that he acquired at this time by Valescus de Taranta Jan Mesue Hugo Senensis Jan Ketham Arnold de Villa Nova and Michele Savonarola which would form the embryo of his later medical library 35 Astrology One of the subjects that Copernicus must have studied was astrology since it was considered an important part of a medical education 37 However unlike most other prominent Renaissance astronomers he appears never to have practiced or expressed any interest in astrology 38 Greek studies As at Bologna Copernicus did not limit himself to his official studies It was probably the Padua years that saw the beginning of his Hellenistic interests He familiarized himself with Greek language and culture with the aid of Theodorus Gaza s grammar 1495 and Johannes Baptista Chrestonius s dictionary 1499 expanding his studies of antiquity begun at Bologna to the writings of Bessarion Lorenzo Valla and others There also seems to be evidence that it was during his Padua stay that the idea finally crystallized of basing a new system of the world on the movement of the Earth 35 As the time approached for Copernicus to return home in spring 1503 he journeyed to Ferrara where on 31 May 1503 having passed the obligatory examinations he was granted the degree of Doctor of Canon Law Nicolaus Copernich de Prusia Jure Canonico et doctoratus 39 No doubt it was soon after at latest in fall 1503 that he left Italy for good to return to Warmia 35 Planetary observations Copernicus made three observations of Mercury with errors of 3 15 and 1 minutes of arc He made one of Venus with an error of 24 minutes Four were made of Mars with errors of 2 20 77 and 137 minutes Four observations were made of Jupiter with errors of 32 51 11 and 25 minutes He made four of Saturn with errors of 31 20 23 and 4 minutes 40 Other observations With Novara Copernicus observed an occultation of Aldebaran by the moon on 9 March 1497 Copernicus also observed a conjunction of Saturn and the moon on 4 March 1500 He saw an eclipse of the moon on 6 November 1500 41 42 Work Copernicus s translation of Theophylact Simocatta s Epistles Cover shows coat of arms of clockwise from top Poland Lithuania and Krakow Copernicus s tower at Frombork where he lived and worked reconstructed since World War II Olsztyn Castle where Copernicus resided from 1516 to 1521 Having completed all his studies in Italy 30 year old Copernicus returned to Warmia where he would live out the remaining 40 years of his life apart from brief journeys to Krakow and to nearby Prussian cities Torun Thorn Gdansk Danzig Elblag Elbing Grudziadz Graudenz Malbork Marienburg Konigsberg Krolewiec 35 The Prince Bishopric of Warmia enjoyed substantial autonomy with its own diet parliament and monetary unit the same as in the other parts of Royal Prussia and treasury 43 Copernicus was his uncle s secretary and physician from 1503 to 1510 or perhaps till his uncle s death on 29 March 1512 and resided in the Bishop s castle at Lidzbark Heilsberg where he began work on his heliocentric theory In his official capacity he took part in nearly all his uncle s political ecclesiastic and administrative economic duties From the beginning of 1504 Copernicus accompanied Watzenrode to sessions of the Royal Prussian diet held at Malbork and Elblag and write Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz participated in all the more important events in the complex diplomatic game that ambitious politician and statesman played in defense of the particular interests of Prussia and Warmia between hostility to the Teutonic Order and loyalty to the Polish Crown 35 In 1504 12 Copernicus made numerous journeys as part of his uncle s retinue in 1504 to Torun and Gdansk to a session of the Royal Prussian Council in the presence of Poland s King Alexander Jagiellon to sessions of the Prussian diet at Malbork 1506 Elblag 1507 and Sztum Stuhm 1512 and he may have attended a Poznan Posen session 1510 and the coronation of Poland s King Sigismund I the Old in Krakow 1507 Watzenrode s itinerary suggests that in spring 1509 Copernicus may have attended the Krakow sejm 35 It was probably on the latter occasion in Krakow that Copernicus submitted for printing at Jan Haller s press his translation from Greek to Latin of a collection by the 7th century Byzantine historian Theophylact Simocatta of 85 brief poems called Epistles or letters supposed to have passed between various characters in a Greek story They are of three kinds moral offering advice on how people should live pastoral giving little pictures of shepherd life and amorous comprising love poems They are arranged to follow one another in a regular rotation of subjects Copernicus had translated the Greek verses into Latin prose and he now published his version as Theophilacti scolastici Simocati epistolae morales rurales et amatoriae interpretatione latina which he dedicated to his uncle in gratitude for all the benefits he had received from him With this translation Copernicus declared himself on the side of the humanists in the struggle over the question of whether Greek literature should be revived 44 Copernicus s first poetic work was a Greek epigram composed probably during a visit to Krakow for Johannes Dantiscus epithalamium for Barbara Zapolya s 1512 wedding to King Zygmunt I the Old 45 Commentariolus an initial outline of a heliocentric theory Some time before 1514 Copernicus wrote an initial outline of his heliocentric theory known only from later transcripts by the title perhaps given to it by a copyist Nicolai Copernici de hypothesibus motuum coelestium a se constitutis commentariolus commonly referred to as the Commentariolus It was a succinct theoretical description of the world s heliocentric mechanism without mathematical apparatus and differed in some important details of geometric construction from De revolutionibus but it was already based on the same assumptions regarding Earth s triple motions The Commentariolus which Copernicus consciously saw as merely a first sketch for his planned book was not intended for printed distribution He made only a very few manuscript copies available to his closest acquaintances including it seems several Krakow astronomers with whom he collaborated in 1515 30 in observing eclipses Tycho Brahe would include a fragment from the Commentariolus in his own treatise Astronomiae instauratae progymnasmata published in Prague in 1602 based on a manuscript that he had received from the Bohemian physician and astronomer Tadeas Hajek a friend of Rheticus The Commentariolus would appear complete in print for the first time only in 1878 45 Astronomical observations 1513 16 In 1510 or 1512 Copernicus moved to Frombork a town to the northwest at the Vistula Lagoon on the Baltic Sea coast There in April 1512 he participated in the election of Fabian of Lossainen as Prince Bishop of Warmia It was only in early June 1512 that the chapter gave Copernicus an external curia a house outside the defensive walls of the cathedral mount In 1514 he purchased the northwestern tower within the walls of the Frombork stronghold He would maintain both these residences to the end of his life despite the devastation of the chapter s buildings by a raid against Frauenburg carried out by the Teutonic Order in January 1520 during which Copernicus s astronomical instruments were probably destroyed Copernicus conducted astronomical observations in 1513 16 presumably from his external curia and in 1522 43 from an unidentified small tower turricula using primitive instruments modeled on ancient ones the quadrant triquetrum armillary sphere At Frombork Copernicus conducted over half of his more than 60 registered astronomical observations 45 Administrative duties in Warmia Having settled permanently at Frombork where he would reside to the end of his life with interruptions in 1516 19 and 1520 21 Copernicus found himself at the Warmia chapter s economic and administrative center which was also one of Warmia s two chief centers of political life In the difficult politically complex situation of Warmia threatened externally by the Teutonic Order s aggressions attacks by Teutonic bands the Polish Teutonic War of 1519 21 Albert s plans to annex Warmia internally subject to strong separatist pressures the selection of the prince bishops of Warmia currency reform he together with part of the chapter represented a program of strict cooperation with the Polish Crown and demonstrated in all his public activities the defense of his country against the Order s plans of conquest proposals to unify its monetary system with the Polish Crown s support for Poland s interests in the Warmia dominion s ecclesiastic administration that he was consciously a citizen of the Polish Lithuanian Republic Soon after the death of uncle Bishop Watzenrode he participated in the signing of the Second Treaty of Piotrkow Trybunalski 7 December 1512 governing the appointment of the Bishop of Warmia declaring despite opposition from part of the chapter for loyal cooperation with the Polish Crown 45 That same year before 8 November 1512 Copernicus assumed responsibility as magister pistoriae for administering the chapter s economic enterprises he would hold this office again in 1530 having already since 1511 fulfilled the duties of chancellor and visitor of the chapter s estates 45 His administrative and economic duties did not distract Copernicus in 1512 15 from intensive observational activity The results of his observations of Mars and Saturn in this period and especially a series of four observations of the Sun made in 1515 led to the discovery of the variability of Earth s eccentricity and of the movement of the solar apogee in relation to the fixed stars which in 1515 19 prompted his first revisions of certain assumptions of his system Some of the observations that he made in this period may have had a connection with a proposed reform of the Julian calendar made in the first half of 1513 at the request of the Bishop of Fossombrone Paul of Middelburg Their contacts in this matter in the period of the Fifth Lateran Council were later memorialized in a complimentary mention in Copernicus s dedicatory epistle in De revolutionibus orbium coelestium and in a treatise by Paul of Middelburg Secundum compendium correctionis Calendarii 1516 which mentions Copernicus among the learned men who had sent the Council proposals for the calendar s emendation 46 During 1516 21 Copernicus resided at Olsztyn Allenstein Castle as economic administrator of Warmia including Olsztyn Allenstein and Pieniezno Mehlsack While there he wrote a manuscript Locationes mansorum desertorum Locations of Deserted Fiefs with a view to populating those fiefs with industrious farmers and so bolstering the economy of Warmia When Olsztyn was besieged by the Teutonic Knights during the Polish Teutonic War Copernicus directed the defense of Olsztyn and Warmia by Royal Polish forces He also represented the Polish side in the ensuing peace negotiations 47 Copernicus holding lily of the valley portrait in Nicolaus Reusner s Icones 1587 48 n Advisor on monetary reform Copernicus for years advised the Royal Prussian sejmik on monetary reform particularly in the 1520s when that was a major question in regional Prussian politics 49 In 1526 he wrote a study on the value of money Monetae cudendae ratio In it he formulated an early iteration of the theory now called Gresham s law that bad debased coinage drives good un debased coinage out of circulation several decades before Thomas Gresham He also in 1517 set down a quantity theory of money a principal concept in economics to the present day Copernicus s recommendations on monetary reform were widely read by leaders of both Prussia and Poland in their attempts to stabilize currency 50 Copernican system presented to the Pope In 1533 Johann Widmanstetter secretary to Pope Clement VII explained Copernicus s heliocentric system to the Pope and two cardinals The Pope was so pleased that he gave Widmanstetter a valuable gift 51 In 1535 Bernard Wapowski wrote a letter to a gentleman in Vienna urging him to publish an enclosed almanac which he claimed had been written by Copernicus This is the only mention of a Copernicus almanac in the historical records The almanac was likely Copernicus s tables of planetary positions Wapowski s letter mentions Copernicus s theory about the motions of the earth Nothing came of Wapowski s request because he died a couple of weeks later 51 Following the death of Prince Bishop of Warmia Mauritius Ferber 1 July 1537 Copernicus participated in the election of his successor Johannes Dantiscus 20 September 1537 Copernicus was one of four candidates for the post written in at the initiative of Tiedemann Giese but his candidacy was actually pro forma since Dantiscus had earlier been named coadjutor bishop to Ferber and since Dantiscus had the backing of Poland s King Sigismund I 52 At first Copernicus maintained friendly relations with the new Prince Bishop assisting him medically in spring 1538 and accompanying him that summer on an inspection tour of Chapter holdings But that autumn their friendship was strained by suspicions over Copernicus s housekeeper Anna Schilling whom Dantiscus banished from Frombork in spring 1539 52 Medical work In his younger days Copernicus the physician had treated his uncle brother and other chapter members In later years he was called upon to attend the elderly bishops who in turn occupied the see of Warmia Mauritius Ferber and Johannes Dantiscus and in 1539 his old friend Tiedemann Giese Bishop of Chelmno Kulm In treating such important patients he sometimes sought consultations from other physicians including the physician to Duke Albert and by letter the Polish Royal Physician 53 In the spring of 1541 Duke Albert former Grand Master of the Teutonic Order who had converted the Monastic State of the Teutonic Knights into a Lutheran and hereditary realm the Duchy of Prussia upon doing homage to his uncle the King of Poland Sigismund I summoned Copernicus to Konigsberg to attend the Duke s counselor George von Kunheim who had fallen seriously ill and for whom the Prussian doctors seemed unable to do anything Copernicus went willingly he had met von Kunheim during negotiations over reform of the coinage And Copernicus had come to feel that Albert himself was not such a bad person the two had many intellectual interests in common The Chapter readily gave Copernicus permission to go as it wished to remain on good terms with the Duke despite his Lutheran faith In about a month the patient recovered and Copernicus returned to Frombork For a time he continued to receive reports on von Kunheim s condition and to send him medical advice by letter 54 Protestant attacks on the Copernican system Some of Copernicus s close friends turned Protestant but Copernicus never showed a tendency in that direction The first attacks on him came from Protestants Wilhelm Gnapheus a Dutch refugee settled in Elblag wrote a comedy in Latin Morosophus The Foolish Sage and staged it at the Latin school that he had established there In the play Copernicus was caricatured as the eponymous Morosophus a haughty cold aloof man who dabbled in astrology considered himself inspired by God and was rumored to have written a large work that was moldering in a chest 26 Elsewhere Protestants were the first to react to news of Copernicus s theory Melanchthon wrote Some people believe that it is excellent and correct to work out a thing as absurd as did that Sarmatian i e Polish astronomer who moves the earth and stops the sun Indeed wise rulers should have curbed such light mindedness 26 Nevertheless in 1551 eight years after Copernicus s death astronomer Erasmus Reinhold published under the sponsorship of Copernicus s former military adversary the Protestant Duke Albert the Prussian Tables a set of astronomical tables based on Copernicus s work Astronomers and astrologers quickly adopted it in place of its predecessors 55 Heliocentrism Nicolaus Copernicus Tornaeus Borussus Mathemat 1597 Some time before 1514 Copernicus made available to friends his Commentariolus Little Commentary a manuscript describing his ideas about the heliocentric hypothesis o It contained seven basic assumptions detailed below 56 Thereafter he continued gathering data for a more detailed work At about 1532 Copernicus had basically completed his work on the manuscript of De revolutionibus orbium coelestium but despite urging by his closest friends he resisted openly publishing his views not wishing as he confessed to risk the scorn to which he would expose himself on account of the novelty and incomprehensibility of his theses 52 Reception of the Copernican system in Rome In 1533 Johann Albrecht Widmannstetter delivered a series of lectures in Rome outlining Copernicus s theory Pope Clement VII and several Catholic cardinals heard the lectures and were interested in the theory On 1 November 1536 Cardinal Nikolaus von Schonberg Archbishop of Capua wrote to Copernicus from Rome Some years ago word reached me concerning your proficiency of which everybody constantly spoke At that time I began to have a very high regard for you For I had learned that you had not merely mastered the discoveries of the ancient astronomers uncommonly well but had also formulated a new cosmology In it you maintain that the earth moves that the sun occupies the lowest and thus the central place in the universe Therefore with the utmost earnestness I entreat you most learned sir unless I inconvenience you to communicate this discovery of yours to scholars and at the earliest possible moment to send me your writings on the sphere of the universe together with the tables and whatever else you have that is relevant to this subject 57 By then Copernicus s work was nearing its definitive form and rumors about his theory had reached educated people all over Europe Despite urgings from many quarters Copernicus delayed publication of his book perhaps from fear of criticism a fear delicately expressed in the subsequent dedication of his masterpiece to Pope Paul III Scholars disagree on whether Copernicus s concern was limited to possible astronomical and philosophical objections or whether he was also concerned about religious objections p De revolutionibus orbium coelestium Copernicus was still working on De revolutionibus orbium coelestium even if not certain that he wanted to publish it when in 1539 Georg Joachim Rheticus a Wittenberg mathematician arrived in Frombork Philipp Melanchthon a close theological ally of Martin Luther had arranged for Rheticus to visit several astronomers and study with them Rheticus became Copernicus s pupil staying with him for two years and writing a book Narratio prima First Account outlining the essence of Copernicus s theory In 1542 Rheticus published a treatise on trigonometry by Copernicus later included as chapters 13 and 14 of Book I of De revolutionibus 58 Under strong pressure from Rheticus and having seen the favorable first general reception of his work Copernicus finally agreed to give De revolutionibus to his close friend Tiedemann Giese bishop of Chelmno Kulm to be delivered to Rheticus for printing by the German printer Johannes Petreius at Nuremberg Nurnberg Germany While Rheticus initially supervised the printing he had to leave Nuremberg before it was completed and he handed over the task of supervising the rest of the printing to a Lutheran theologian Andreas Osiander 59 Osiander added an unauthorised and unsigned preface defending Copernicus s work against those who might be offended by its novel hypotheses He argued that different hypotheses are sometimes offered for one and the same motion and therefore the astronomer will take as his first choice that hypothesis which is the easiest to grasp According to Osiander these hypotheses need not be true nor even probable I f they provide a calculus consistent with the observations that alone is enough 60 Death 1735 epitaph Frombork Cathedral Frombork Cathedral Toward the close of 1542 Copernicus was seized with apoplexy and paralysis and he died at age 70 on 24 May 1543 Legend has it that he was presented with the final printed pages of his De revolutionibus orbium coelestium on the very day that he died allowing him to take farewell of his life s work q He is reputed to have awoken from a stroke induced coma looked at his book and then died peacefully r Copernicus was reportedly buried in Frombork Cathedral where a 1580 epitaph stood until being defaced it was replaced in 1735 For over two centuries archaeologists searched the cathedral in vain for Copernicus s remains Efforts to locate them in 1802 1909 1939 had come to nought In 2004 a team led by Jerzy Gassowski head of an archaeology and anthropology institute in Pultusk began a new search guided by the research of historian Jerzy Sikorski 61 62 In August 2005 after scanning beneath the cathedral floor they discovered what they believed to be Copernicus s remains 63 The discovery was announced only after further research on 3 November 2008 Gassowski said he was almost 100 percent sure it is Copernicus 64 Forensic expert Capt Dariusz Zajdel of the Polish Police Central Forensic Laboratory used the skull to reconstruct a face that closely resembled the features including a broken nose and a scar above the left eye on a Copernicus self portrait 64 The expert also determined that the skull belonged to a man who had died around age 70 Copernicus s age at the time of his death 63 The grave was in poor condition and not all the remains of the skeleton were found missing among other things was the lower jaw 65 The DNA from the bones found in the grave matched hair samples taken from a book owned by Copernicus which was kept at the library of the University of Uppsala in Sweden 62 66 On 22 May 2010 Copernicus was given a second funeral in a Mass led by Jozef Kowalczyk the former papal nuncio to Poland and newly named Primate of Poland Copernicus s remains were reburied in the same spot in Frombork Cathedral where part of his skull and other bones had been found A black granite tombstone now identifies him as the founder of the heliocentric theory and also a church canon The tombstone bears a representation of Copernicus s model of the Solar System a golden Sun encircled by six of the planets 67 Copernican systemMain article Copernican heliocentrism Predecessors Philolaus c 470 c 385 BCE described an astronomical system in which a Central Fire different from the Sun occupied the centre of the universe and a counter Earth the Earth Moon the Sun itself planets and stars all revolved around it in that order outward from the centre 68 Heraclides Ponticus 387 312 BCE proposed that the Earth rotates on its axis 69 Aristarchus of Samos c 310 BCE c 230 BCE was the first to advance a theory that the earth orbited the sun 70 Further mathematical details of Aristarchus s heliocentric system were worked out around 150 BCE by the Hellenistic astronomer Seleucus of Seleucia Though Aristarchus s original text has been lost a reference in Archimedes book The Sand Reckoner Archimedis Syracusani Arenarius amp Dimensio Circuli describes a work by Aristarchus in which he advanced the heliocentric model Thomas Heath gives the following English translation of Archimedes s text 71 You are now aware you being King Gelon that the universe is the name given by most astronomers to the sphere the centre of which is the centre of the earth while its radius is equal to the straight line between the centre of the sun and the centre of the earth This is the common account ta grafomena as you have heard from astronomers But Aristarchus has brought out a book consisting of certain hypotheses wherein it appears as a consequence of the assumptions made that the universe is many times greater than the universe just mentioned His hypotheses are that the fixed stars and the sun remain unmoved that the earth revolves about the sun on the circumference of a circle the sun lying in the middle of the orbit and that the sphere of the fixed stars situated about the same centre as the sun is so great that the circle in which he supposes the earth to revolve bears such a proportion to the distance of the fixed stars as the centre of the sphere bears to its surface The Sand Reckoner In an early unpublished manuscript of De Revolutionibus which still survives Copernicus mentioned the non heliocentric moving Earth theory of Philolaus and the possibility that Aristarchus also had a moving Earth theory though it is unlikely that he was aware that it was a heliocentric theory He removed both references from his final published manuscript c e Copernicus was probably aware that Pythagoras s system involved a moving Earth The Pythagorean system was mentioned by Aristotle 73 Copernicus owned a copy of Giorgio Valla s De expetendis et fugiendis rebus which included a translation of Plutarch s reference to Aristarchus s heliostaticism 74 In Copernicus s dedication of On the Revolutions to Pope Paul III which Copernicus hoped would dampen criticism of his heliocentric theory by babblers completely ignorant of astronomy the book s author wrote that in rereading all of philosophy in the pages of Cicero and Plutarch he had found references to those few thinkers who dared to move the Earth against the traditional opinion of astronomers and almost against common sense The prevailing theory during Copernicus s lifetime was the one that Ptolemy published in his Almagest c 150 CE the Earth was the stationary center of the universe Stars were embedded in a large outer sphere that rotated rapidly approximately daily while each of the planets the Sun and the Moon were embedded in their own smaller spheres Ptolemy s system employed devices including epicycles deferents and equants to account for observations that the paths of these bodies differed from simple circular orbits centered on the Earth 75 Beginning in the 10th century a tradition criticizing Ptolemy developed within Islamic astronomy which climaxed with Ibn al Haytham of Basra s Al Shukuk ala Baṭalamiyus Doubts Concerning Ptolemy 76 Several Islamic astronomers questioned the Earth s apparent immobility 77 78 and centrality within the universe 79 Some accepted that the earth rotates around its axis such as Abu Sa id al Sijzi d c 1020 80 81 According to al Biruni al Sijzi invented an astrolabe based on a belief held by some of his contemporaries that the motion we see is due to the Earth s movement and not to that of the sky 81 82 That others besides al Sijzi held this view is further confirmed by a reference from an Arabic work in the 13th century which states According to the geometers or engineers muhandisin the earth is in constant circular motion and what appears to be the motion of the heavens is actually due to the motion of the earth and not the stars 81 In the 12th century Nur ad Din al Bitruji proposed a complete alternative to the Ptolemaic system although not heliocentric 83 84 He declared the Ptolemaic system as an imaginary model successful at predicting planetary positions but not real or physical 83 84 Al Bitruji s alternative system spread through most of Europe during the 13th century with debates and refutations of his ideas continued up to the 16th century 84 Tusi couple Mathematical techniques developed in the 13th to 14th centuries by Mo ayyeduddin al Urdi Nasir al Din al Tusi and Ibn al Shatir for geocentric models of planetary motions closely resemble some of those used later by Copernicus in his heliocentric models 85 Copernicus used what is now known as the Urdi lemma and the Tusi couple in the same planetary models as found in Arabic sources 86 Furthermore the exact replacement of the equant by two epicycles used by Copernicus in the Commentariolus was found in an earlier work by Ibn al Shatir d c 1375 of Damascus 87 Ibn al Shatir s lunar and Mercury models are also identical to those of Copernicus 88 This has led some scholars to argue that Copernicus must have had access to some yet to be identified work on the ideas of those earlier astronomers 89 However no likely candidate for this conjectured work has yet come to light and other scholars have argued that Copernicus could well have developed these ideas independently of the late Islamic tradition 90 Nevertheless Copernicus cited some of the Islamic astronomers whose theories and observations he used in De Revolutionibus namely al Battani Thabit ibn Qurra al Zarqali Averroes and al Bitruji 91 Copernicus Copernicus s schematic diagram of his heliocentric theory of the Solar System from De revolutionibus orbium coelestium 92 As it appears in the surviving autograph manuscript As it appears in the first printed edition Copernicus s major work on his heliocentric theory was De revolutionibus orbium coelestium On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres published in the year of his death 1543 He had formulated his theory by 1510 He wrote out a short overview of his new heavenly arrangement known as the Commentariolus or Brief Sketch also probably in 1510 but no later than May 1514 and sent it off to at least one correspondent beyond Varmia the Latin for Warmia That person in turn copied the document for further circulation and presumably the new recipients did too 93 Copernicus s Commentariolus summarized his heliocentric theory It listed the assumptions upon which the theory was based as follows 94 There is no one center of all the celestial circles 95 or spheres 96 The center of the earth is not the center of the universe but only the center towards which heavy bodies move and the center of the lunar sphere All the spheres surround the sun as if it were in the middle of them all and therefore the center of the universe is near the sun The ratio of the earth s distance from the sun to the height of the firmament outermost celestial sphere containing the stars is so much smaller than the ratio of the earth s radius to its distance from the sun that the distance from the earth to the sun is imperceptible in comparison with the height of the firmament Whatever motion appears in the firmament arises not from any motion of the firmament but from the earth s motion The earth together with its circumjacent elements performs a complete rotation on its fixed poles in a daily motion while the firmament and highest heaven abide unchanged What appear to us as motions of the sun arise not from its motion but from the motion of the earth and our sphere with which we revolve about the sun like any other planet The earth has then more than one motion The apparent retrograde and direct motion of the planets arises not from their motion but from the earth s The motion of the earth alone therefore suffices to explain so many apparent inequalities in the heavens De revolutionibus itself was divided into six sections or parts called books 97 General vision of the heliocentric theory and a summarized exposition of his idea of the World Mainly theoretical presents the principles of spherical astronomy and a list of stars as a basis for the arguments developed in the subsequent books Mainly dedicated to the apparent motions of the Sun and to related phenomena Description of the Moon and its orbital motions Exposition of the motions in longitude of the non terrestrial planets Exposition of the motions in latitude of the non terrestrial planetsSuccessors See also Copernican Revolution Casket with Copernicus s remains on exhibition in Olsztyn Georg Joachim Rheticus could have been Copernicus s successor but did not rise to the occasion 51 Erasmus Reinhold could have been his successor but died prematurely 51 The first of the great successors was Tycho Brahe 51 though he did not think the Earth orbited the Sun followed by Johannes Kepler 51 who had collaborated with Tycho in Prague and benefited from Tycho s decades worth of detailed observational data 98 Despite the near universal acceptance later of the heliocentric idea though not the epicycles or the circular orbits Copernicus s theory was originally slow to catch on Scholars hold that sixty years after the publication of The Revolutions there were only around 15 astronomers espousing Copernicanism in all of Europe Thomas Digges and Thomas Harriot in England Giordano Bruno and Galileo Galilei in Italy Diego Zuniga in Spain Simon Stevin in the Low Countries and in Germany the largest group Georg Joachim Rheticus Michael Maestlin Christoph Rothmann who may have later recanted 99 and Johannes Kepler 99 Additional possibilities are Englishman William Gilbert along with Achilles Gasser Georg Vogelin Valentin Otto and Tiedemann Giese 99 Arthur Koestler in his popular book The Sleepwalkers asserted that Copernicus s book had not been widely read on its first publication 100 This claim was trenchantly criticised by Edward Rosen s and has been decisively disproved by Owen Gingerich who examined nearly every surviving copy of the first two editions and found copious marginal notes by their owners throughout many of them Gingerich published his conclusions in 2004 in The Book Nobody Read 101 The intellectual climate of the time remained dominated by Aristotelian philosophy and the corresponding Ptolemaic astronomy At that time there was no reason to accept the Copernican theory except for its mathematical simplicity by avoiding using the equant in determining planetary positions 102 Tycho Brahe s system that the earth is stationary the sun revolves about the earth and the other planets revolve about the sun 102 also directly competed with Copernicus s It was only a half century later with the work of Kepler and Galileo that any substantial evidence defending Copernicanism appeared starting from the time when Galileo formulated the principle of inertia which helped to explain why everything would not fall off the earth if it were in motion 102 Not until after Isaac Newton formulated the universal law of gravitation and the laws of mechanics in his 1687 Principia which unified terrestrial and celestial mechanics was the heliocentric view generally accepted 102 In 1610 Galileo Galilei observed with his telescope that Venus showed phases despite remaining near the Sun in Earth s sky first image This proved that it orbits the Sun and not Earth as predicted by Copernicus s heliocentric model and disproved the then conventional geocentric model second image ControversySee also Catholic Church and science The immediate result of the 1543 publication of Copernicus s book was only mild controversy At the Council of Trent 1545 63 neither Copernicus s theory nor calendar reform which would later use tables deduced from Copernicus s calculations were discussed 103 It has been much debated why it was not until six decades after the publication of De revolutionibus that the Catholic Church took any official action against it even the efforts of Tolosani going unheeded Catholic side opposition only commenced seventy three years later when it was occasioned by Galileo 104 Tolosani The first notable to move against Copernicanism was the Magister of the Holy Palace i e the Catholic Church s chief censor Dominican Bartolomeo Spina who expressed a desire to stamp out the Copernican doctrine 105 But with Spina s death in 1546 his cause fell to his friend the well known theologian astronomer the Dominican Giovanni Maria Tolosani of the Convent of St Mark in Florence Tolosani had written a treatise on reforming the calendar in which astronomy would play a large role and had attended the Fifth Lateran Council 1512 1517 to discuss the matter He had obtained a copy of De Revolutionibus in 1544 His denunciation of Copernicanism was written a year later in 1545 in an appendix to his unpublished work On the Truth of Sacred Scripture 106 Emulating the rationalistic style of Thomas Aquinas Tolosani sought to refute Copernicanism by philosophical argument Copernicanism was absurd according to Tolosani because it was scientifically unproven and unfounded First Copernicus had assumed the motion of the Earth but offered no physical theory whereby one would deduce this motion No one realized that the investigation into Copernicanism would result in a rethinking of the entire field of physics Second Tolosani charged that Copernicus s thought process was backwards He held that Copernicus had come up with his idea and then sought phenomena that would support it rather than observing phenomena and deducing from them the idea of what caused them In this Tolosani was linking Copernicus s mathematical equations with the practices of the Pythagoreans whom Aristotle had made arguments against which were later picked up by Thomas Aquinas It was argued that mathematical numbers were a mere product of the intellect without any physical reality and as such could not provide physical causes in the investigation of nature 107 Some astronomical hypotheses at the time such as epicycles and eccentrics were seen as mere mathematical devices to adjust calculations of where the heavenly bodies would appear rather than an explanation of the cause of those motions As Copernicus still maintained the idea of perfectly spherical orbits he relied on epicycles This saving the phenomena was seen as proof that astronomy and mathematics could not be taken as serious means to determine physical causes Tolosani invoked this view in his final critique of Copernicus saying that his biggest error was that he had started with inferior fields of science to make pronouncements about superior fields Copernicus had used mathematics and astronomy to postulate about physics and cosmology rather than beginning with the accepted principles of physics and cosmology to determine things about astronomy and mathematics Thus Copernicus seemed to be undermining the whole system of the philosophy of science at the time Tolosani held that Copernicus had fallen into philosophical error because he had not been versed in physics and logic anyone without such knowledge would make a poor astronomer and be unable to distinguish truth from falsehood Because Copernicanism had not met the criteria for scientific truth set out by Thomas Aquinas Tolosani held that it could only be viewed as a wild unproven theory 108 109 Tolosani recognized that the Ad Lectorem preface to Copernicus s book was not actually by him Its thesis that astronomy as a whole would never be able to make truth claims was rejected by Tolosani though he still held that Copernicus s attempt to describe physical reality had been faulty he found it ridiculous that Ad Lectorem had been included in the book unaware that Copernicus had not authorized its inclusion Tolosani wrote By means of these words of the Ad Lectorem the foolishness of this book s author is rebuked For by a foolish effort he Copernicus tried to revive the weak Pythagorean opinion that the element of fire was at the center of the Universe long ago deservedly destroyed since it is expressly contrary to human reason and also opposes holy writ From this situation there could easily arise disagreements between Catholic expositors of holy scripture and those who might wish to adhere obstinately to this false opinion 110 Tolosani declared Nicolaus Copernicus neither read nor understood the arguments of Aristotle the philosopher and Ptolemy the astronomer 106 Tolosani wrote that Copernicus is expert indeed in the sciences of mathematics and astronomy but he is very deficient in the sciences of physics and logic Moreover it appears that he is unskilled with regard to the interpretation of holy scripture since he contradicts several of its principles not without danger of infidelity to himself and the readers of his book his arguments have no force and can very easily be taken apart For it is stupid to contradict an opinion accepted by everyone over a very long time for the strongest reasons unless the impugner uses more powerful and insoluble demonstrations and completely dissolves the opposed reasons But he does not do this in the least 110 Tolosani declared that he had written against Copernicus for the purpose of preserving the truth to the common advantage of the Holy Church 111 Despite this his work remained unpublished and there is no evidence that it received serious consideration Robert Westman describes it as becoming a dormant viewpoint with no audience in the Catholic world of the late sixteenth century but also notes that there is some evidence that it did become known to Tommaso Caccini who would criticize Galileo in a sermon in December 1613 111 Theology Photograph of a mid 16th century portrait t Tolosani may have criticized the Copernican theory as scientifically unproven and unfounded but the theory also conflicted with the theology of the time as can be seen in a sample of the works of John Calvin In his Commentary on Genesis he said that We indeed are not ignorant that the circuit of the heavens is finite and that the earth like a little globe is placed in the centre 112 In his commentary on Psalms 93 1 he states that The heavens revolve daily and immense as is their fabric and inconceivable the rapidity of their revolutions we experience no concussion How could the earth hang suspended in the air were it not upheld by God s hand By what means could it maintain itself unmoved while the heavens above are in constant rapid motion did not its Divine Maker fix and establish it 113 One sharp point of conflict between Copernicus s theory and the Bible concerned the story of the Battle of Gibeon in the Book of Joshua where the Hebrew forces were winning but whose opponents were likely to escape once night fell This is averted by Joshua s prayers causing the Sun and the Moon to stand still Martin Luther once made a remark about Copernicus although without mentioning his name According to Anthony Lauterbach while eating with Martin Luther the topic of Copernicus arose during dinner on 4 June 1539 in the same year as professor George Joachim Rheticus of the local University had been granted leave to visit him Luther is said to have remarked So it goes now Whoever wants to be clever must agree with nothing others esteem He must do something of his own This is what that fellow does who wishes to turn the whole of astronomy upside down Even in these things that are thrown into disorder I believe the Holy Scriptures for Joshua commanded the sun to stand still and not the earth 102 These remarks were made four years before the publication of On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres and a year before Rheticus s Narratio Prima In John Aurifaber s account of the conversation Luther calls Copernicus that fool rather than that fellow this version is viewed by historians as less reliably sourced 102 Luther s collaborator Philipp Melanchthon also took issue with Copernicanism After receiving the first pages of Narratio Prima from Rheticus himself Melanchthon wrote to Mithobius physician and mathematician Burkard Mithob of Feldkirch on 16 October 1541 condemning the theory and calling for it to be repressed by governmental force writing certain people believe it is a marvelous achievement to extol so crazy a thing like that Polish astronomer who makes the earth move and the sun stand still Really wise governments ought to repress impudence of mind 114 It had appeared to Rheticus that Melanchton would understand the theory and would be open to it This was because Melanchton had taught Ptolemaic astronomy and had even recommended his friend Rheticus to an appointment to the Deanship of the Faculty of Arts amp Sciences at the University of Wittenberg after he had returned from studying with Copernicus 115 Rheticus s hopes were dashed when six years after the publication of De Revolutionibus Melanchthon published his Initia Doctrinae Physicae presenting three grounds to reject Copernicanism These were the evidence of the senses the thousand year consensus of men of science and the authority of the Bible 116 Blasting the new theory Melanchthon wrote Out of love for novelty or in order to make a show of their cleverness some people have argued that the earth moves They maintain that neither the eighth sphere nor the sun moves whereas they attribute motion to the other celestial spheres and also place the earth among the heavenly bodies Nor were these jokes invented recently There is still extant Archimedes s book on The Sand Reckoner in which he reports that Aristarchus of Samos propounded the paradox that the sun stands still and the earth revolves around the sun Even though subtle experts institute many investigations for the sake of exercising their ingenuity nevertheless public proclamation of absurd opinions is indecent and sets a harmful example 114 Melanchthon went on to cite Bible passages and then declare Encouraged by this divine evidence let us cherish the truth and let us not permit ourselves to be alienated from it by the tricks of those who deem it an intellectual honor to introduce confusion into the arts 114 In the first edition of Initia Doctrinae Physicae Melanchthon even questioned Copernicus s character claiming his motivation was either from love of novelty or from desire to appear clever these more personal attacks were largely removed by the second edition in 1550 116 Copernicus s 2010 gravestone in Frombork Cathedral Another Protestant theologian who disparaged heliocentrism on scriptural grounds was John Owen In a passing remark in an essay on the origin of the sabbath he characterised the late hypothesis fixing the sun as in the centre of the world as being built on fallible phenomena and advanced by many arbitrary presumptions against evident testimonies of Scripture 117 In Roman Catholic circles Copernicus s book was incorporated into scholarly curricula throughout the 16th century For example at the University of Salamanca in 1561 it became one of four text books that students of astronomy could choose from and in 1594 it was made mandatory 118 German Jesuit Nicolaus Serarius was one of the first Catholics to write against Copernicus s theory as heretical citing the Joshua passage in a work published in 1609 1610 and again in a book in 1612 119 In his 12 April 1615 letter to a Catholic defender of Copernicus Paolo Antonio Foscarini Catholic Cardinal Robert Bellarmine condemned Copernican theory writing not only the Holy Fathers but also the modern commentaries on Genesis the Psalms Ecclesiastes and Joshua you will find all agreeing in the literal interpretation that the sun is in heaven and turns around the earth with great speed and that the earth is very far from heaven and sits motionless at the center of the world Nor can one answer that this is not a matter of faith since if it is not a matter of faith as regards the topic it is a matter of faith as regards the speaker and so it would be heretical to say that Abraham did not have two children and Jacob twelve as well as to say that Christ was not born of a virgin because both are said by the Holy Spirit through the mouth of prophets and apostles 120 One year later the Roman Inquisition prohibited Copernicus s work Nevertheless the Spanish Inquisition never banned the De revolutionibus which continued to be taught at Salamanca 118 Ingoli Perhaps the most influential opponent of the Copernican theory was Francesco Ingoli a Catholic priest Ingoli wrote a January 1616 essay to Galileo presenting more than twenty arguments against the Copernican theory 121 Though it is not certain it is probable that he Ingoli was commissioned by the Inquisition to write an expert opinion on the controversy 122 after the Congregation of the Index s decree against Copernicanism on 5 March 1616 Ingoli was officially appointed its consultant 122 Galileo himself was of the opinion that the essay played an important role in the rejection of the theory by church authorities writing in a later letter to Ingoli that he was concerned that people thought the theory was rejected because Ingoli was right 121 Ingoli presented five physical arguments against the theory thirteen mathematical arguments plus a separate discussion of the sizes of stars and four theological arguments The physical and mathematical arguments were of uneven quality but many of them came directly from the writings of Tycho Brahe and Ingoli repeatedly cited Brahe the leading astronomer of the era These included arguments about the effect of a moving Earth on the trajectory of projectiles and about parallax and Brahe s argument that the Copernican theory required that stars be absurdly large 123 Two of Ingoli s theological issues with the Copernican theory were common Catholic beliefs not directly traceable to Scripture the doctrine that hell is located at the center of Earth and is most distant from heaven and the explicit assertion that Earth is motionless in a hymn sung on Tuesdays as part of the Liturgy of the Hours of the Divine Office prayers regularly recited by priests 124 Ingoli cited Robert Bellarmine in regards to both of these arguments and may have been trying to convey to Galileo a sense of Bellarmine s opinion 125 Ingoli also cited Genesis 1 14 where God places lights in the firmament of the heavens to divide the day from the night Ingoli did not think the central location of the Sun in the Copernican theory was compatible with it being described as one of the lights placed in the firmament 124 Like previous commentators Ingoli also pointed to the passages about the Battle of Gibeon He dismissed arguments that they should be taken metaphorically saying Replies which assert that Scripture speaks according to our mode of understanding are not satisfactory both because in explaining the Sacred Writings the rule is always to preserve the literal sense when it is possible as it is in this case and also because all the Church Fathers unanimously take this passage to mean that the Sun which was truly moving stopped at Joshua s request An interpretation that is contrary to the unanimous consent of the Fathers is condemned by the Council of Trent Session IV in the decree on the edition and use of the Sacred Books Furthermore although the Council speaks about matters of faith and morals nevertheless it cannot be denied that the Holy Fathers would be displeased with an interpretation of Sacred Scriptures which is contrary to their common agreement 124 However Ingoli closed the essay by suggesting Galileo respond primarily to the better of his physical and mathematical arguments rather than to his theological arguments writing Let it be your choice to respond to this either entirely of in part clearly at least to the mathematical and physical arguments and not to all even of these but to the more weighty ones 126 When Galileo wrote a letter in reply to Ingoli years later he in fact only addressed the mathematical and physical arguments 126 In March 1616 in connection with the Galileo affair the Roman Catholic Church s Congregation of the Index issued a decree suspending De revolutionibus until it could be corrected on the grounds of ensuring that Copernicanism which it described as a false Pythagorean doctrine altogether contrary to the Holy Scripture would not creep any further to the prejudice of Catholic truth 127 The corrections consisted largely of removing or altering wording that spoke of heliocentrism as a fact rather than a hypothesis 128 The corrections were made based largely on work by Ingoli 122 Galileo On the orders of Pope Paul V Cardinal Robert Bellarmine gave Galileo prior notice that the decree was about to be issued and warned him that he could not hold or defend the Copernican doctrine u The corrections to De revolutionibus which omitted or altered nine sentences were issued four years later in 1620 129 In 1633 Galileo Galilei was convicted of grave suspicion of heresy for following the position of Copernicus which is contrary to the true sense and authority of Holy Scripture 130 and was placed under house arrest for the rest of his life 131 132 At the instance of Roger Boscovich the Catholic Church s 1758 Index of Prohibited Books omitted the general prohibition of works defending heliocentrism 133 but retained the specific prohibitions of the original uncensored versions of De revolutionibus and Galileo s Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems Those prohibitions were finally dropped from the 1835 Index 134 Languages name and nationalityLanguages German language letter from Copernicus to Duke Albert of Prussia giving medical advice for George von Kunheim 1541 Copernicus is postulated to have spoken Latin German and Polish with equal fluency he also spoke Greek and Italian and had some knowledge of Hebrew v w x y The vast majority of Copernicus s extant writings are in Latin the language of European academia in his lifetime Arguments for German being Copernicus s native tongue are that he was born into a predominantly German speaking urban patrician class using German next to Latin as language of trade and commerce in written documents 142 and that while studying canon law at the University of Bologna in 1496 he signed into the German natio Natio Germanorum a student organization which according to its 1497 by laws was open to students of all kingdoms and states whose mother tongue was German 143 However according to French philosopher Alexandre Koyre Copernicus s registration with the Natio Germanorum does not in itself imply that Copernicus considered himself German since students from Prussia and Silesia were routinely so categorized which carried certain privileges that made it a natural choice for German speaking students regardless of their ethnicity or self identification 143 z aa 146 Name The surname Kopernik Copernik Koppernigk in various spellings is recorded in Krakow from c 1350 apparently given to people from the village of Koperniki prior to 1845 rendered Kopernik Copernik Copirnik and Koppirnik in the Duchy of Nysa 10 km south of Nysa and now 10 km north of the Polish Czech border Nicolaus Copernicus s great grandfather is recorded as having received citizenship in Krakow in 1386 The toponym Kopernik modern Koperniki has been variously tied to the Polish word for dill koper and the German word for copper Kupfer ab The suffix nik or plural niki denotes a Slavic and Polish agent noun As was common in the period the spellings of both the toponym and the surname vary greatly Copernicus was rather indifferent about orthography 147 During his childhood about 1480 the name of his father and thus of the future astronomer was recorded in Thorn as Niclas Koppernigk 148 At Krakow he signed himself in Latin Nicolaus Nicolai de Torunia Nicolaus son of Nicolaus of Torun ac At Bologna in 1496 he registered in the Matricula Nobilissimi Germanorum Collegii resp Annales Clarissimae Nacionis Germanorum of the Natio Germanica Bononiae as Dominus Nicolaus Kopperlingk de Thorn IX grosseti 150 151 At Padua he signed himself Nicolaus Copernik later Coppernicus 147 The astronomer thus Latinized his name to Coppernicus generally with two p s in 23 of 31 documents studied 152 but later in life he used a single p On the title page of De revolutionibus Rheticus published the name in the genitive or possessive case as Nicolai Copernici Nationality There has been discussion of Copernicus s nationality and of whether it is meaningful to ascribe to him a nationality in the modern sense Nicolaus Copernicus was born and raised in Royal Prussia a semiautonomous and multilingual region of the Kingdom of Poland 153 154 He was the child of German speaking parents and grew up with German as his mother tongue 155 156 157 His first alma mater was the University of Krakow in Poland When he later studied in Italy at the University of Bologna he joined the German Nation a student organization for German speakers of all allegiances Germany would not become a nation state until 1871 158 159 His family stood against the Teutonic Order and actively supported the city of Torun during the Thirteen Years War Copernicus s father lent money to Poland s King Casimir IV Jagiellon to finance the war against the Teutonic Knights 160 but the inhabitants of Royal Prussia also resisted the Polish crown s efforts for greater control over the region 153 Encyclopedia Americana 161 The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia 162 The Oxford World Encyclopedia 163 and World Book Encyclopedia 164 refer to Copernicus as a Polish astronomer Sheila Rabin writing in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy describes Copernicus as a child of a German family who was a subject of the Polish crown 10 while Manfred Weissenbacher writes that Copernicus s father was a Germanized Pole 165 No Polish texts by Copernicus survive due to the rarity of Polish language in literature before the writings of the Polish Renaissance poets Mikolaj Rej and Jan Kochanowski educated Poles had generally written in Latin but it is known that Copernicus knew Polish on a par with German and Latin 166 Historian Michael Burleigh describes the nationality debate as a totally insignificant battle between German and Polish scholars during the interwar period 167 Polish astronomer Konrad Rudnicki calls the discussion a fierce scholarly quarrel in times of nationalism and describes Copernicus as an inhabitant of a German speaking territory that belonged to Poland himself being of mixed Polish German extraction 168 Czeslaw Milosz describes the debate as an absurd projection of a modern understanding of nationality onto Renaissance people who identified with their home territories rather than with a nation 169 Similarly historian Norman Davies writes that Copernicus as was common in his era was largely indifferent to nationality being a local patriot who considered himself Prussian 170 Milosz and Davies both write that Copernicus had a German language cultural background while his working language was Latin in accord with the usage of the time 169 170 Additionally according to Davies there is ample evidence that he knew the Polish language 170 Davies concludes that Taking everything into consideration there is good reason to regard him both as a German and as a Pole and yet in the sense that modern nationalists understand it he was neither 170 CommemorationOrbiting Astronomical Observatory 3 The third in NASA s Orbiting Astronomical Observatory series of missions launched on 21 August 1972 was named Copernicus after its successful launch The satellite carried an X ray detector and an ultraviolet telescope and operated until February 1981 Copernicia Replica of Warsaw s Copernicus Monument in Montreal Canada Bust by Schadow 1807 in the Walhalla memorial Nicolaus Copernicus Monument in Krakow Statue of Copernicus outside of Frombork Cathedral Copernicia a genus of palm trees native to South America and the Greater Antilles was named after Copernicus in 1837 In some of the species the leaves are coated with a thin layer of wax known as carnauba wax Copernicium Main article Copernicium On 14 July 2009 the discoverers from the Gesellschaft fur Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt Germany of chemical element 112 temporarily named ununbium proposed to the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry IUPAC that its permanent name be copernicium symbol Cn After we had named elements after our city and our state we wanted to make a statement with a name that was known to everyone said Hofmann We didn t want to select someone who was a German We were looking world wide 171 On the 537th anniversary of his birthday the name became official 172 55 Cancri A In July 2014 the International Astronomical Union launched NameExoWorlds a process for giving proper names to certain exoplanets and their host stars 173 The process involved public nomination and voting for the new names 174 In December 2015 the IAU announced the winning name for 55 Cancri A was Copernicus 175 Poland Copernicus is commemorated by the Nicolaus Copernicus Monument in Warsaw designed by Bertel Thorvaldsen 1822 completed in 1830 and by Jan Matejko s 1873 painting Astronomer Copernicus or Conversations with God Named for Copernicus are Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun Warsaw s Copernicus Science Centre Copernicus Hospital in Poland s third largest city Lodz and Wroclaw International Airport Copernicus Airport Wroclaw A Copernicus Award has been established jointly by the Foundation for Polish Science and the German Research Foundation to promote Polish German scientific cooperation Influence Contemporary literary and artistic works inspired by Copernicus include Mover of the Earth Stopper of the Sun overture for symphony orchestra by composer Svitlana Azarova commissioned by ONDIF 176 177 Doctor Copernicus 1975 novel by John Banville sketching the life of Copernicus and the 16th century world in which he lived See alsoCopernican principle Copernicus Science Centre History of philosophy in Poland List of multiple discoveries List of Roman Catholic scientist clericsNotes The oldest known portrait of Copernicus is that on the Strasbourg astronomical clock made by Tobias Stimmer c 1571 74 According to the inscription next to that portrait it was made from a self portrait by Copernicus himself This has led to speculation that the Torun portrait whose provenance is unknown may be a copy based on the same self portrait 1 Modern pronunciation of the Polish form of the name miˈkɔwaj kɔˈpɛrɲik listen a b The Greek mathematician and astronomer Aristarchus of Samos proposed such a system during the third century BCE Dreyer 1953 pp 135 48 In an early unpublished manuscript of De Revolutionibus which still survives today in the Jagiellonian Library in Krakow Copernicus wrote that It is credible that Philolaus believed in the mobility of the Earth and some even say that Aristarchus was of that opinion a passage that was removed from the published edition a decision described by Owen Gingerich as eminently sensible from an editorial viewpoint 6 Philolaus was not a heliocentrist as he thought that both the Earth and the Sun moved around a central fire Gingerich says that there is no evidence that Copernicus was aware of the few clear references to Aristarchus s heliocentrism in ancient texts as distinct from one other unclear and confusing one especially Archimedes s The Sand Reckoner which was not in print until the year after Copernicus died and that it would have been in his interest to mention them had he known of them before concluding that he developed his idea and its justification independently of Aristarchus 6 Dava Sobel 2011 writes Copernicus had no idea that Aristarchus of Samos had proposed much the same thing as Copernicus was contemplating by 1510 when he wrote his Brief Sketch otherwise also known as the Commentariolus in the third century B C The only work by Aristarchus known to Copernicus a treatise called On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon made no mention of a heliocentric plan Sobel 2011 pp 18 19 Sobel further writes that in Copernicus s dedication of On the Revolutions to Pope Paul III which Copernicus hoped would dampen criticism of his heliocentric theory by babblers completely ignorant of astronomy the book s author wrote that in rereading all of philosophy in the pages of Cicero and Plutarch he had found references to those few thinkers who dared to move the Earth against the traditional opinion of astronomers and almost against common sense Sobel comments He still knew nothing of the Earth moving plan of Aristarchus which had not yet been reported to Latin audiences pp 179 82 a b George Kish 1978 argues that Copernicus knew about Aristarchus s heliocentric theory saying Copernicus himself admitted that the theory was attributed to Aristarchus though this does not seem to be generally known it is a curious fact that Copernicus did mention the theory of Aristarchus in a passage which he later suppressed 72 Copernicus seems to have drawn up some notes on the displacement of good coin from circulation by debased coin while he was at Olsztyn in 1519 He made them the basis of a report on the matter written in German which he presented to the Prussian Diet held in 1522 at Grudziadz He later drew up a revised and enlarged version of his little treatise this time in Latin and setting forth a general theory of money for presentation to the Diet of 1528 8 The name of the village not unlike that of the astronomer s family has been variously spelled A large German atlas of Silesia published by Wieland in Nuremberg in 1731 spells it Kopernik 13 In 1512 Bishop Watzenrode died suddenly after attending King Sigismund s wedding feast in Krakow Rumors abounded that the bishop had been poisoned by agents of his long time foe the Teutonic Knights 20 Watzenrode was also firm and the Teutonic Knights who remained a constant menace did not like him at all the Grand Master of the order once described him as the devil incarnate Watzenrode was the trusted friend and advisor of three Polish kings in succession John Albert Alexander not to be confused with the poisoning pope and Sigismund and his influence greatly strengthened the ties between Warmia and Poland proper 21 To obtain for his nephews Nicolaus and Andreas the necessary support for their studies in Italy the bishop Lucas Watzenrode the Younger procured their election as canons by the chapter of Frauenburg 1497 1498 25 Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 describe Copernicus having attended school at Wloclawek as unlikely 11 Translated to English it reads Here where stood the house of Domenico Maria Novara professor of the ancient Studium of Bologna NICOLAUS COPERNICUS the Polish mathematician and astronomer who would revolutionize concepts of the universe conducted brilliant celestial observations with his teacher in 1497 1500 Placed on the 5th centenary of Copernicus s birth by the City the University the Academy of Sciences of the Institute of Bologna the Polish Academy of Sciences 1473 1973 Copernicus s brother Andreas would before the end of 1512 develop leprosy and be forced to leave Warmia for Italy In November 1518 Copernicus would learn that his brother had died 36 This was based on sketch by Tobias Stimmer c 1570 and allegedly based on a self portrait by Copernicus It inspired most later Copernicus depictions 48 A reference to the Commentariolus is contained in a library catalogue dated 1 May 1514 of a 16th century historian Matthew of Miechow so it must have begun circulating before that date Koyre 1973 p 85 Gingerich 2004 p 32 Thoren 1990 p 99 gives the length of the manuscript as 40 pages Koyre 1973 pp 27 90 and Rosen 1995 pp 64 184 take the view that Copernicus was indeed concerned about possible objections from theologians while Lindberg and Numbers 1986 argue against it Koestler 1963 also denies it Indirect evidence that Copernicus was concerned about objections from theologians comes from a letter written to him by Andreas Osiander in 1541 in which Osiander advises Copernicus to adopt a proposal by which he says you will be able to appease the Peripatetics and theologians whose opposition you fear Koyre 1973 pp 35 90 According to Bell 1992 p 111 Copernicus on his deathbed received the printer s proofs of his epoch breaking De revolutionibus orbium coelestium Koestler 1963 page 189 says the following about a letter from Canon Tiedemann Giese to Georg Joachim Rheticus the end came only after several months on 24 May In a letter to Rheticus written a few weeks later Giese recorded the event in a single tragic sentence For many days he had been deprived of his memory and mental vigour he only saw his completed book at the last moment on the day he died Koestler attributes this quotation to Leopold Prowe Nicolaus Copernicus Berlin 1883 1884 volume 1 part 2 p 554 Rosen 1995 pp 187 92 originally published in 1967 in Saggi su Galileo Galilei Rosen is particularly scathing about this and other statements in The Sleepwalkers which he criticizes as inaccurate The original painting was looted and possibly destroyed by the Germans in World War II during the occupation of Poland Fantoli 2005 pp 118 19 Finocchiaro 1989 pp 148 153 On line copies of Finocchiaro s translations of the relevant documents Inquisition Minutes of 25 February 1616 and Cardinal Bellarmine s certificate of 26 May 1616 have been made available by Gagne 2005 This notice of the decree would not have prevented Galileo from discussing heliocentrism solely as a mathematical hypothesis but a stronger formal injunction Finocchiaro 1989 pp 147 48 not to teach it in any way whatever either orally or in writing allegedly issued to him by the Commissary of the Holy Office Father Michelangelo Segizzi would certainly have done so Fantoli 2005 pp 119 20 137 There has been much controversy over whether the copy of this injunction in the Vatican archives is authentic if so whether it was ever issued and if so whether it was legally valid Fantoli 2005 pp 120 43 He spoke German Polish and Latin with equal fluency as well as Italian 135 He spoke Polish Latin and Greek 136 He was a linguist with a command of Polish German and Latin and he possessed also a knowledge of Greek rare at that period in northeastern Europe and probably had some acquaintance with Italian and Hebrew 137 He used Latin and German knew enough Greek to translate the 7th century Byzantine poet Theophylact Simocatta s verses into Latin prose 44 and there is ample evidence that he knew the Polish language 138 Edward Rosen mentions that Copernicus recorded Polish farm tenants names inconsistently gainsaying that he was fluent in the Polish language 139 But decades after Copernicus each of William Shakespeare s extant autograph signatures showed a different spelling 140 During his several years studies in Italy Copernicus presumably learned some Italian Professor Stefan Melkowski of Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun asserts that Copernicus also spoke both German and Polish 141 Although great importance has frequently been ascribed to this fact it does not imply that Copernicus considered himself to be a German The nationes of a medieval university had nothing in common with nations in the modern sense of the word Students who were natives of Prussia and Silesia were automatically described as belonging to the Natio Germanorum Furthmore at Bologna this was the privileged nation consequently Copernicus had very good reason for inscribing himself on its register 144 It is important to recognize however that the medieval Latin concept of natio or nation referred to the community of feudal lords both in Germany and elsewhere not to the people in the nineteenth century democratic or nationalistic sense of the word 145 These interpretations date to the dispute about Copernicus s Polish vs German ethnicity which had been open since the 1870s and the copper vs dill interpretations go back to the 19th century Magazin fur die Literatur des Auslandes 1875 534 f but the dispute became virulent again in the 1960s culminating in a controversy between E Mosko copper and S Rospond dill in 1963 64 summarized by Zygmunt Brocki Wsrod publikacji o etymologii nazwiska Mikotaja Kopernika Some Publications on the Etymology of the Surname of Nicholaus Copernicus Komunikaty mazur warm 1970 In the enrollment documents still in existence we find the entry Nicolaus Nicolai de Torunia 149 References Andre Goddu Copernicus and the Aristotelian Tradition 2010 p 436 note 125 citing Goddu review of Jerzy Gassowski Poszukiwanie grobu Mikolaja Kopernika Search for Grave of Nicolaus Copernicus in Journal for the History of Astronomy 38 2 May 2007 p 255 Jones Daniel 2003 1917 Roach Peter Hartmann James Setter Jane eds English Pronouncing Dictionary Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 3 12 539683 8 Copernicus Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d Copernicus Merriam Webster Dictionary Linton 2004 pp 39 119 a b Owen Gingerich Did Copernicus Owe a Debt to Aristarchus Journal for the History of Astronomy vol 16 no 1 February 1985 pp 37 42 There is no question but that Aristarchus had the priority of the heliocentric idea Yet there is no evidence that Copernicus owed him anything 9 As far as we can tell both the idea and its justification were found independently by Copernicus Edward Rosen Copernicus Nicolaus Encyclopedia Americana International Edition volume 7 Danbury Connecticut Grolier Incorporated 1986 ISBN 0 7172 0117 1 pp 755 56 Angus Armitage The World of Copernicus 1951 p 91 Ilowiecki Maciej 1981 Dzieje nauki polskiej in Polish Warszawa Wydawnictwo Interpress p 40 ISBN 978 83 223 1876 8 a b Sheila Rabin Nicolaus Copernicus Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 22 April 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 p 4 John Freely Celestial Revolutionary I B Tauris 2014 pp 103 04 110 13 ISBN 978 1780763507 Mizwa p 36 a b c d e Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 p 3 Bienkowska 1973 p 15 Rybka 1973 p 23 Sakolsky 2005 p 8 Biskup 1973 p 16 Mizwa 1943 p 38 Hirshfeld p 38 Moore 1994 pp 52 62 a b c d e f g h i Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 p 5 Wojciech Iwanczak 1998 Watzenrode Lucas In Bautz Traugott ed Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Vol 13 Herzberg Bautz col 389 93 ISBN 3 88309 072 7 Moore 1994 p 62 Nicolaus Copernicus New Advent online version of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved 9 June 2013 a b c Czeslaw Milosz The History of Polish Literature p 38 Angus Armitage The World of Copernicus p 55 Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 pp 4 5 Sobel 2011 pp 7 232 Jerzy Dobrzycki and Leszek Hajdukiewicz Kopernik Mikolaj Polski slownik biograficzny Polish Biographical Dictionary vol XIV Wroclaw Polish Academy of Sciences 1969 p 5 Rosen Ed December 1960 Copernicus was not a priest PDF Proc Am Philos Soc 104 6 Archived from the original PDF on 29 October 2013 Rosen Edward 1995 Chapter 6 Copernicus Alleged Priesthood In Hilfstein Erna ed Copernicus and his successors UK The Hambledon Press pp 47 56 Bibcode 1995cops book R ISBN 978 1 85285 071 5 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Hagen J 1908 Nicolaus Copernicus Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 6 November 2015 Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 pp 5 6 a b c d e f g h Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 p 6 Sobel 2011 pp 26 34 40 Rabin 2005 Gingerich 2004 pp 187 89 201 Koyre 1973 p 94 Kuhn 1957 p 93 Rosen 2004 p 123 Rabin 2005 Robbins 1964 p x however includes Copernicus among a list of Renaissance astronomers who either practiced astrology themselves or countenanced its practice Nicolaus Copernicus Gesamtausgabe Bd VI Urkunden Akten und NachrichtenDocumenta Copernicana Urkunden Akten und Nachrichten alle erhaltenen Urkunden und Akten zur Familiengeschichte zur Biographie und Tatigkeitsfeldern von Copernicus 1996 ISBN 978 3 05 003009 8 5 pp 62 63 Studia Copernicana 16 Sparavigna Ameila Carolina 2017 Stellarium software and the occultation of Aldebaran observed by Copernicus HAL Retrieved 22 July 2022 Nicolaus Copernicus Biography Sedlar 1994 a b Angus Armitage The World of Copernicus pp 75 77 a b c d e Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 p 7 Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 pp 7 8 Repcheck 2007 p 66 a b Andreas Kuhne Stefan Kirschner Biographia Copernicana Die Copernicus Biographien des 16 bis 18 Jahrhunderts 2004 p 14 Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 p 9 Volckart Oliver 1997 Early Beginnings of the Quantity Theory of Money and Their Context in Polish and Prussian Monetary Policies c 1520 1550 The Economic History Review New Series 50 3 430 49 doi 10 1111 1468 0289 00063 a b c d e f Repcheck 2007 pp 78 79 184 186 a b c Dobrzycki and Hajdukiewicz 1969 p 11 Angus Armitage The World of Copernicus pp 97 98 Angus Armitage The World of Copernicus p 98 Kuhn 1957 pp 187 88 Goddu 2010 245 46 Nicholas Copernicus Calendars www webexhibits org Freely Celestial Revolutionary p 149 Dreyer 1953 p 319 Sobel 2011 p 188 Gassowski Jerzy 2005 Poszukiwanie grobu Kopernika Searching for Copernicus s Grave astronomia pl in Polish Grupa Astronomia Archived from the original on 8 July 2014 Retrieved 7 December 2017 It results from the research of Dr Jerzy Sikorski an Olsztyn historian and an outstanding researcher of the life and work of Nicolaus Copernicus According to Dr Sikorski the canon of the Frombork cathedral was buried in the immediate vicinity of this altar which was entrusted to their care This altar was the one who once wore the call of Saint Andrew and now St Cross fourth in the right row a b Bogdanowicz W Allen M Branicki W Lembring M Gajewska M Kupiec T 2009 Genetic identification of putative remains of the famous astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus PNAS 106 30 12279 82 Bibcode 2009PNAS 10612279B doi 10 1073 pnas 0901848106 PMC 2718376 PMID 19584252 a b Easton Adam 21 November 2008 Polish tests confirm Copernicus BBC News Retrieved 18 January 2010 a b Copernicus s grave found in Polish church USA Today 3 November 2005 Retrieved 26 July 2012 Bowcott Owen 21 November 2008 16th century skeleton identified as astronomer Copernicus The Guardian Retrieved 18 January 2010 Gingerich O 2009 The Copernicus grave mystery PNAS 106 30 12215 16 Bibcode 2009PNAS 10612215G doi 10 1073 pnas 0907491106 PMC 2718392 PMID 19622737 16th century astronomer Copernicus reburied as hero in Poland Cleveland Plain Dealer Associated Press 25 May 2010 Dreyer 1953 pp 40 52 Linton 2004 p 20 Dreyer 1953 pp 123 35 Linton 2004 p 24 Dreyer 1953 pp 135 48 Heath 1913 pp 301 08 Heath 1913 p 302 The italics and parenthetical comments are as they appear in Heath s original George Kish 1978 A Source Book in Geography Harvard University Press pp 51 52 ISBN 978 0 674 82270 2 Aristotle De Caelo Book 2 Part 13 E Rosen Nicholaus Copernicus and Giorgio Valla Physis Rivista internazionale di Storia della Scienza 23 1981 pp 449 57 Gingerich Owen 1997 Ptolemy Copernicus and Kepler The Eye of Heaven Springer pp 3 51 Saliba George 1 July 1995 A History of Arabic Astronomy Planetary Theories During the Golden Age of Islam NYU Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 8147 8023 7 Ragep F Jamil 2001a Tusi and Copernicus The Earth s Motion in Context Science in Context 14 1 2 145 63 doi 10 1017 s0269889701000060 S2CID 145372613 Ragep F Jamil Al Qushji Ali 2001b Freeing Astronomy from Philosophy An Aspect of Islamic Influence on Science Osiris 2nd Series 16 Science in Theistic Contexts Cognitive Dimensions 49 64 amp 66 71 Bibcode 2001Osir 16 49R doi 10 1086 649338 S2CID 142586786 Adi Setia 2004 Fakhr Al Din Al Razi on Physics and the Nature of the Physical World A Preliminary Survey Islam amp Science 2 archived from the original on 10 July 2012 retrieved 2 March 2010 Alessandro Bausani 1973 Cosmology and Religion in Islam Scientia Rivista di Scienza 108 67 762 a b c Young M J L ed 2 November 2006 Religion Learning and Science in the Abbasid Period Cambridge University Press p 413 ISBN 978 0 521 02887 5 Nasr Seyyed Hossein 1 January 1993 An Introduction to Islamic Cosmological Doctrines SUNY Press p 135 ISBN 978 1 4384 1419 5 a b Samso Julio 2007 Biṭruji Nur al Din Abu Isḥaq Abu Jaʿfar Ibrahim ibn Yusuf al Biṭruji In Thomas Hockey et al eds The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers New York Springer pp 133 34 ISBN 978 0 387 31022 0 PDF version a b c Samso Julio 1970 1980 Al Bitruji Al Ishbili Abu Ishaq Dictionary of Scientific Biography New York Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 978 0 684 10114 9 Esposito 1999 p 289harvnb error no target CITEREFEsposito1999 help Saliba George 1 July 1995 A History of Arabic Astronomy Planetary Theories During the Golden Age of Islam NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 8023 7 Swerdlow Noel M 31 December 1973 The Derivation and First Draft of Copernicus s Planetary Theory A Translation of the Commentariolus with Commentary Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 117 6 423 512 Bibcode 1973PAPhS 117 423S ISSN 0003 049X JSTOR 986461 King David A 2007 Ibn al Shaṭir ʿAlaʾ al Din ʿAli ibn Ibrahim In Thomas Hockey et al eds The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers New York Springer pp 569 70 ISBN 978 0 387 31022 0 PDF version Linton 2004 pp 124 137 38 Saliba 2009 pp 160 65 Swerdlow amp Neugebauer 1984 pp 46 48 Goddu 2010 pp 261 69 476 86 Huff 2010 pp 263 64 di Bono 1995 Veselovsky 1973 Freely John 30 March 2015 Light from the East How the Science of Medieval Islam Helped to Shape the Western World I B Tauris p 179 ISBN 978 1 78453 138 6 Except for the circle labelled V Telluris in the diagram from the printed edition representing the orbital path of the Earth and the first circle in both diagrams representing the outer boundary of the universe and of a presumed spherical shell of fixed stars the numbered circles in the diagrams represent the boundaries of hypothetical spherical shells orbes in Copernicus s Latin whose motion was assumed to carry the planets and their epicycles around the Sun Gingerich 2014 pp 36 38 2016 pp 34 35 Sobel 2011 p 18 Rosen 2004 pp 58 59 Swerdlow 1973 p 436 Latin orbium Latin sphaerarum Dreyer John L E 1906 History of the planetary systems from Thales to Kepler Cambridge University Press p 342 Sobel 2011 pp 207 10 a b c Danielson 2006 Koestler 1959 p 191 DeMarco Peter 13 April 2004 Book quest took him around the globe The Boston Globe Retrieved 3 June 2013 a b c d e f Donald H Kobe 1998 Copernicus and Martin Luther An Encounter Between Science and Religion American Journal of Physics 66 3 190 Bibcode 1998AmJPh 66 190K doi 10 1119 1 18844 Westman 2011 p 194 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Nicolaus Copernicus www newadvent org Feldhay 1995 p 205 a b Westman 2011 p 195 Feldhay 1995 pp 205 07 Feldhay 1995 p 207 Westman 2011 pp 195 96 a b Westman 2011 p 196 a b Westman 2011 p 197 Rosen 1960 p 437 Rosen 1960 p 438 a b c Rosen 1995 p 198 Repcheck 2007 p 160 a b Cohen I Bernard 1985 Revolution in Science Cambridge MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 497 ISBN 978 0 674 76778 2 Owen 1869 p 310 Rosen 1995 p 166 67 Owen s remark appears in volume XI of his collected works not the volume XIX cited by Rosen a b Crowther Kathleen M 2020 Sacrobosco s Sphaera in Spain and Portugal De Sphaera of Johannes de Sacrobosco in the Early Modern Period 161 184 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 30833 9 7 ISBN 978 3 030 30832 2 S2CID 214562125 Finocchiaro 2010 p 71 Finocchiaro 2010 p 75 a b Graney 2015 pp 68 69 a b c Finocchiaro 2010 p 72 Graney 2015 pp 69 75 a b c Finocchiaro 2010 p 73 Graney 2015 p 74 a b Graney 2015 p 70 Decree of the General Congregation of the Index 5 March 1616 translated from the Latin by Finocchiaro 1989 pp 148 49 An on line copy of Finocchiaro s translation has been made available by Gagne 2005 Finocchiaro 1989 p 30 Catholic Encyclopedia From the Inquisition s sentence of 22 June 1633 de Santillana 1976 pp 306 10 Finocchiaro 1989 pp 287 91 Hilliam Rachel 2005 Galileo Galilei Father of Modern Science The Rosen Publishing Group p 96 ISBN 978 1 4042 0314 3 Galileo is convicted of heresy history com Retrieved 13 December 2013 Heilbron 2005 p 307 Coyne 2005 p 347 McMullin 2005 p 6 Coyne 2005 pp 346 47 Stone p 101 Somerville p 10 Angus Armitage Copernicus the founder of modern astronomy p 62 Davies Norman 2005 God s playground A History of Poland in Two Volumes Vol II Oxford University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 19 925340 1 Edward Rosen Nicolaus Copernicus Thorunensis Sidney Lee Shakespeare s Handwriting Facsimiles of the Five Authentic Autograph Signatures London Smith Elder 1899 Melkowski Stefan May 2003 O historii i o wspolczesnosci On History and the Present Day in Polish Archived from the original on 24 January 2004 Retrieved 22 April 2007 Bogucka Maria Samsonowicz Henryk 1986 Dzieje Miast i Mieszczanstwa w Polsce Przedrozbiorowej PDF pp 266 267 a b Rosen 1995 p 127 Koyre p 21 Johnson p 23 Koestler 1968 p 129 a b Gingerich 2004 p 143 Biskup 1973 p 32 Moore 1994 p 50 Biskup 1973 pp 38 82 Malagola 1878 p 562 65 Nicolaus Coppernicus aus Thorn uber die Kreisbewegungen der Weltkorper Vorwort Wikisource de wikisource org a b Krystyna Poray Goddu Copernicus and the Aristotelian Tradition BRILL 2010 ISBN 978 90 04 18107 6 part 1 chapter 1 p 7 Jack Repcheck Copernicus Secret How the Scientific Revolution Began Simon amp Schuster 2008 ISBN 978 0 7432 8952 8 p 32 Manfred Weissenbacher Sources of Power How Energy Forges Human History Praeger 2009 ISBN 978 0 313 35626 1 p 170 Marvin Bolt JoAnn Palmeri Thomas Hockey The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers Springer 2009 ISBN 978 0 387 35133 9 p 252 Charles E Hummel The Galileo Connection InterVarsity Press 1986 ISBN 978 0 87784 500 3 p 40 Krystyna Poray Goddu Copernicus and the Aristotelian Tradition BRILL 2010 ISBN 978 90 04 18107 6 chapter 6 p 173 John Freely Celestial Revolutionary Copernicus the Man and His Universe I B Tauris 2014 ISBN 978 0 85773 490 7 pp 56 57 Freely John 2014 Celestial Revolutionary Copernicus the Man and His Universe I B Tauris p 6 ISBN 978 0 85773 490 7 Copernicus Nicolaus Encyclopedia Americana 1986 vol 7 pp 755 56 Copernicus Nicholas The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia New York Avon Books 1983 ISBN 0 380 63396 5 p 198 Polish astronomer Copernicus Nicolaus The Oxford World Encyclopedia Oxford University Press 1998 Findlen Paula 2013 Copernicus Nicolaus World Book Advanced Archived from the original on 18 October 2015 Retrieved 31 May 2013 Weissenbacher 2009 p 170 Karol Gorski Mikolaj Kopernik Srodowisko spoleczne i samotnosc Mikolaj Kopernik Nicolaus Copernicus His Social Setting and Isolation Torun Nicolaus Copernicus University Press 2012 ISBN 978 83 231 2777 2 Burleigh Michael 1988 Germany turns eastwards A study of Ostforschung in the Third Reich CUP Archive pp 60 133 280 ISBN 978 0 521 35120 1 Rudnicki Konrad November December 2006 The Genuine Copernican Cosmological Principle Southern Cross Review note 2 Retrieved 21 January 2010 a b Milosz Czeslaw 1983 The history of Polish literature 2 ed University of California Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 520 04477 7 a b c d Davies Norman 2005 God s playground A History of Poland in Two Volumes Vol II Oxford University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 19 925340 1 Fox Stuart 14 July 2009 Newly Discovered Element 112 Named Copernicum popsci com Retrieved 17 August 2012 Renner Terrence 20 February 2010 Element 112 is Named Copernicium International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry Archived from the original on 22 February 2010 Retrieved 20 February 2010 NameExoWorlds An IAU Worldwide Contest to Name Exoplanets and their Host Stars IAU org 9 July 2014 NameExoWorlds nameexoworlds iau org Archived from the original on 15 August 2015 Retrieved 7 January 2016 Final Results of NameExoWorlds Public Vote Released International Astronomical Union 15 December 2015 World premiere 23 January 2013 Salle Pleyel Dutch premiere 1 March 2014 at Amsterdam s Concertgebouw Movers of the Earth Sources Armitage Angus 1951 The World of Copernicus New York Mentor Books Armitage Angus 1990 Copernicus the founder of modern astronomy Dorset Press ISBN 978 0 88029 553 6 Bell Eric Temple 1992 1940 The development of mathematics New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 27239 9 Bienkowska Barbara 1973 The Scientific World of Copernicus On the Occasion of the 500th Anniversary of His Birth 1473 1973 Springer ISBN 978 90 277 0353 8 Biskup Marian 1973 Regesta Copernicana calendar of Copernicus s papers in Polish Ossolineum Carrier Martin 2001 Nikolaus Kopernikus C H Beck ISBN 978 3 406 47577 1 Coyne George V 2005 The Church s Most Recent Attempt to Dispel the Galileo Myth In McMullin 2005 pp 340 59 Danielson Dennis Richard 2006 1 Patrons and Poets footnote 13 The First Copernican Georg Joachim Rheticus and the Rise of the Copernican Revolution New York Walker amp Company p 421 ISBN 978 0 8027 1530 2 Davies Norman God s Playground A History of Poland 2 vols New York Columbia University Press 1982 ISBN 0 231 04327 9 Dobrzycki Jerzy and Leszek Hajdukiewicz Kopernik Mikolaj Polski slownik biograficzny Polish Biographical Dictionary vol XIV Wroclaw Polish Academy of Sciences 1969 pp 3 16 Dreyer John Louis Emil 1953 1906 A History of Astronomy from Thales to Kepler New York Dover Publications Fantoli Annibale 2005 The Disputed Injunction and its Role in Galileo s Trial In McMullin 2005 pp 117 49 Feldhay Rivka 1995 Galileo and the Church Political Inquisition Or Critical Dialogue Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 34468 5 Maurice A Finocchiaro 2010 Defending Copernicus and Galileo Critical Reasoning in the Two Affairs Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 90 481 3201 0 Finocchiaro Maurice A 1989 The Galileo Affair A Documentary History Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06662 5 Gagne Marc 2005 Finocchiaro Maurice A ed Texts from The Galileo Affair A Documentary History Translated by Finocchiaro West Chester University course ESS 362 562 in History of Astronomy Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 15 January 2008 Extracts from Finocchiaro 1989 Pierre Gassendi Olivier Thill September 2002 The Life of Copernicus 1473 1543 Xulon Press ISBN 978 1 59160 193 7 Gingerich Owen 2004 The Book Nobody Read London William Heinemann ISBN 978 0 434 01315 9 Gingerich Owen 2014 God s Planet Bibcode 2014gopl book G ISBN 978 0 674 41710 6 Gingerich Owen 2016 Copernicus A Very Short Introduction Oxford amp New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 933096 6 Goddu Andre 2010 Copernicus and the Aristotelian tradition Leiden Netherlands Brill ISBN 978 90 04 18107 6 Graney Christopher M 2015 Setting Aside All Authority Giovanni Battista Riccioli and the Science Against Copernicus in the Age of Galileo Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 978 0 268 02988 3 Goodman David C Russell Colin A 1991 The Rise of Scientific Europe 1500 1800 Hodder Arnold H amp S ISBN 978 0 340 55861 4 Heath Sir Thomas 1913 Aristarchus of Samos the ancient Copernicus a history of Greek astronomy to Aristarchus together with Aristarchus s Treatise on the sizes and distances of the sun and moon a new Greek text with translation and notes London Oxford University Press Alan W Hirshfeld 1 May 2002 Parallax The Race to Measure the Cosmos Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 0 8050 7133 7 Heilbron John L 2005 Censorship of Astronomy in Italy after Galileo In McMullin 2005 pp 279 322 Hoskin Michael 18 March 1999 The Cambridge Concise History of Astronomy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57600 0 Johnson Lonnie 28 September 1996 Central Europe Enemies Neighbors Friends Oxford University Press US ISBN 978 0 19 802607 5 Koestler Arthur 1963 1959 The Sleepwalkers A History of Man s Changing Vision of the Universe New York Grosset amp Dunlap ISBN 978 0 448 00159 3 Original edition published by Hutchinson 1959 London Arthur Koestler 1968 The Sleepwalkers Macmillan Koeppen Hans et al 1973 Nicolaus Copernicus zum 500 Geburtstag Bohlau Verlag Bibcode 1973ncz book K ISBN 978 3 412 83573 6 Koyre Alexandre 1973 The Astronomical Revolution Copernicus Kepler Borelli Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 0504 4 Kuhn Thomas 1957 The Copernican Revolution Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought Cambridge Harvard University Press Bibcode 1957crpa book K OCLC 535467 Lindberg David C Numbers Ronald L 1986 Beyond War and Peace A Reappraisal of the Encounter between Christianity and Science Church History 55 3 338 354 doi 10 2307 3166822 JSTOR 3166822 S2CID 163075869 Linton Christopher M 2004 From Eudoxus to Einstein A History of Mathematical Astronomy Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82750 8 Malagola Carlo 1878 Della vita e delle opere di Antonio Urceo detto Codro studi e ricerch Fava e Garagnani Manetho Ptolemy 1964 1940 Manetho Ptolemy Tetrabiblos Loeb Classical Library edition translated by W G Waddell and F E Robbins PhD London William Heinemann McMullin Ernan ed 2005 The Church and Galileo Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 978 0 268 03483 2 Milosz Czeslaw The History of Polish Literature second edition Berkeley University of California Press 1969 ISBN 0 520 04477 0 Mizwa Stephen Nicolaus Copernicus 1543 1943 Kessinger Publishing 1943 Moore Patrick 1994 The great astronomical revolution 1543 1687 and the Space Age epilogue Albion ISBN 978 1 898563 18 1 Owen John 1869 1671 Of the Original of the Sabbath in Goold William H Quick Charles W eds The Works of John Owen vol XI Philadelphia The Leighton Publications pp 286 326 Ptolemy Claudius 1964 1940 Tetrabiblos translated by F E Robbins Loeb Classical Library ed London William Heinemann Rabin Sheila 2005 Nicolaus Copernicus In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2005 ed Retrieved 26 May 2008 Repcheck Jack 2007 Copernicus Secret How the Scientific Revolution Began New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 8951 1 Rosen Edward 1960 Calvin s Attitude toward Copernicus Journal of the History of Ideas 21 3 431 41 doi 10 2307 2708147 JSTOR 2708147 Rosen Edward 1995 Hilfstein Erna ed Copernicus and his Successors London Hambledon Press Bibcode 1995cops book R ISBN 978 1 85285 071 5 Rosen Edward 2004 1939 Three Copernican Treatises The Commentariolus of Copernicus The Letter against Werner The Narratio Prima of Rheticus Second Edition revised ed New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 43605 0 Russell Jeffrey Burton 1997 1991 Inventing the Flat Earth Columbus and Modern Historians New York Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 95904 3 The Review of the Polish Academy of Sciences Ossolineum the Polish Academy of Sciences Press 1973 Josh Sakolsky 1 October 2004 Copernicus And Modern Astronomy The Rosen Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 4042 0305 1 Saliba George 2009 Islamic reception of Greek astronomy PDF in Valls Gabaud amp Boskenberg 2009 vol 260 pp 149 65 Bibcode 2011IAUS 260 149S doi 10 1017 S1743921311002237 de Santillana Giorgio 1976 1955 The Crime of Galileo Midway reprint Chicago Ill University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 73481 1 Sedlar Jean W 1994 East Central Europe in the Middle Ages 1000 1500 University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 97290 9 Dava Sobel A More Perfect Heaven How Copernicus Revolutionized the Cosmos New York Walker amp Company 2011 ISBN 978 0 8027 1793 1 unreliable source Features a fictional play about Rheticus visit to Copernicus sandwiched between chapters about the visit s pre history and post history Barbara A Somervill 1 January 2005 Nicolaus Copernicus Father of Modern Astronomy Capstone ISBN 978 0 7565 0812 8 Daniel Stone 2001 The Polish Lithuanian State 1386 1795 University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 98093 5 Swerdlow Noel December 1973 The Derivation and First Draft of Copernicus s Planetary Theory A Translation of the Commentariolus with Commentary Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 117 6 423 512 Swerdlow Noel Mark Neugebauer Otto Eduard 1984 Mathematical Astronomy in Copernicus De Revolutionibus In Two Parts New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 1 4613 8264 5 Thoren Victor E 1990 The Lord of Uraniborg Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 35158 4 A biography of Danish astronomer and alchemist Tycho Brahe Valls Gabaud D Boskenberg A eds 2009 The Role of Astronomy in Society and Culture Proceedings IAU Symposium No 260 Manfred Weissenbacher September 2009 Sources of Power How Energy Forges Human History ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 35626 1 Westman Robert S 2011 The Copernican Question Prognostication Skepticism and Celestial Order Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 25481 7 External linksNicolaus Copernicus at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Latin Wikisource has original text related to this article Nicolaus Copernicus German Wikisource has original text related to this article Nicolaus Copernicus Primary sources Works by Nicolaus Copernicus at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Nicolaus Copernicus at Internet Archive Works by Nicolaus Copernicus at LibriVox public domain audiobooks De Revolutionibus autograph manuscript Full digital facsimile Jagiellonian University in Polish Polish translations of letters written by Copernicus in Latin or German Archived 18 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Online Galleries History of Science Collections University of Oklahoma Libraries Archived 21 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine High resolution images of works by and or portraits of Nicolaus Copernicus in jpg and tiff format Works by Nicolaus Copernicus in digital library PolonaGeneral O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Nicolaus Copernicus MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews Nicolaus Copernicus at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Copernicus in Torun Copernicus House District Museum in Torun Nicolaus Copernicus Thorunensis by the Copernican Academic Portal Nicolaus Copernicus Museum in Frombork Clerke Agnes Mary 1911 Copernicus Nicolaus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed pp 100 101 Portraits of Copernicus Copernicus s face reconstructed Portrait Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Nicolaus Copernicus Copernicus and Astrology Archived 21 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry Body of Copernicus identified BBC article including image of Copernicus using facial reconstruction based on located skull Nicolaus Copernicus on the 1000 Polish Zloty banknote Copernicus s model for Mars Retrograde Motion Copernicus s explanation for retrograde motion Geometry of Maximum Elongation Copernican Model Portraits of Nicolaus CopernicusAbout De Revolutionibus The Copernican Universe from the De Revolutionibus De Revolutionibus 1543 first edition Full digital facsimile Lehigh University The text of the De Revolutionibus Digitized edition of De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium 1543 with annotations of Michael Maestlin on e raraPrizes Nicolaus Copernicus Prize founded by the City of Krakow awarded since 1995German Polish cooperation in English German and Polish German Polish Copernicus Prize awarded to German and Polish scientists DFG website in English German and Polish Buro Kopernikus An initiative of German Federal Cultural Foundation in German and Polish German Polish school project on Copernicus Portals Biography Mathematics Medicine Astronomy Stars Language Poland Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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