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Regiomontanus

Johannes Müller von Königsberg (6 June 1436 – 6 July 1476[1]), better known as Regiomontanus (/ˌrimɒnˈtnəs/), was a mathematician, astrologer and astronomer of the German Renaissance, active in Vienna, Buda and Nuremberg. His contributions were instrumental in the development of Copernican heliocentrism in the decades following his death.

Regiomontanus
18th-century portrait (Iohannes de Regio Monte dictus alias Müllerus)
Born6 June 1436
Königsberg, Electorate of Saxony, Holy Roman Empire
Died6 July 1476(1476-07-06) (aged 40)
NationalityGerman
Education
Known for
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics (trigonometry), astronomy, astrology
InstitutionsUniversitas Istropolitana
Academic advisors
Notable studentsDomenico Novara da Ferrara

Regiomontanus wrote under the Latinized name of Ioannes de Monteregio (or Monte Regio; Regio Monte); the toponym Regiomontanus was first used by Philipp Melanchthon in 1534. He is named after Königsberg in Lower Franconia, not the larger Königsberg (modern Kaliningrad) in Prussia.

Life edit

 
Plaque at Regiomontanus' birthplace
 
Regiomontanus
 
Comet of 1472
Woodcuts from the 1493 Nuremberg Chronicle

Although little is known of Regiomontanus' early life, it is believed that at eleven years of age, he became a student at the University of Leipzig, Saxony. In 1451 he continued his studies at Alma Mater Rudolfina, the university in Vienna, in the Duchy of Austria, where he became a pupil and friend of Georg von Peuerbach. In 1452 he was awarded his bachelor's degree (baccalaureus), and he was awarded his master's degree (magister artium) at the age of 21 in 1457.[2] He lectured in optics and ancient literature.[3]

In 1460 the papal legate Basilios Bessarion came to Vienna on a diplomatic mission. Being a humanist scholar with a great interest in the mathematical sciences, Bessarion sought out Peuerbach's company. George of Trebizond who was Bessarion's philosophical rival had recently produced a new Latin translation of Ptolemy's Almagest from the Greek, which Bessarion, correctly, regarded as inaccurate and badly translated, so he asked Peuerbach to produce a new one. Peuerbach's Greek was not good enough to do a translation but he knew the Almagest intimately so instead he started work on a modernised, improved abridgement of the work. Bessarion also invited Peuerbach to become part of his household and to accompany him back to Italy when his work in Vienna was finished. Peuerbach accepted the invitation on the condition that Regiomontanus could also accompany them. However Peuerbach fell ill in 1461 and died having completed only the first six books of his abridgement of the Almagest. On his death bed Peuerbach made Regiomontanus promise to finish the book and publish it.[1][3]

In 1461 Regiomontanus left Vienna with Bessarion and spent the next four years travelling around Northern Italy as a member of Bessarion's household, looking for and copying mathematical and astronomical manuscripts for Bessarion, who possessed the largest private library in Europe at the time. Regiomontanus also made the acquaintance of the leading Italian mathematicians of the age such as Giovanni Bianchini and Paolo dal Pozzo Toscanelli who had also been friends of Peuerbach during his prolonged stay in Italy more than twenty years earlier.[1]

In 1467, he went to work for János Vitéz, archbishop of Esztergom. There he calculated extensive astronomical tables and built astronomical instruments.[2] Next he went to Buda, and the court of Matthias Corvinus of Hungary, for whom he built an astrolabe, and where he collated Greek manuscripts for a handsome salary.[4] The trigonometric tables that he created while living in Hungary, his Tabulae directionum profectionumque (printed posthum., 1490), were designed for astrology, including finding astrological houses.[5] The Tabulae also contained several tangent tables.[6]

In 1471 Regiomontanus moved to the Free City of Nuremberg, in Franconia, then one of the Empire's important seats of learning, publication, commerce and art, where he worked with the humanist and merchant Bernhard Walther.[4] Here he founded the world's first scientific printing press, and in 1472 he published the first printed astronomical textbook, the Theoricae novae Planetarum of his teacher Georg von Peurbach.[1]

Regiomontanus and Bernhard Walther observed the comet of 1472. Regiomontanus tried to estimate its distance from Earth, using the angle of parallax.[a] According to David A. Seargeant:[7]

In agreement with the prevailing Aristotelian theory on comets as atmospheric phenomena, he estimated its distance to be at least 8,200 miles (13,120 km) and, from this, estimated the central condensation as 26, and the entire coma as 81 miles (41.6 and 129.6 km respectively) in diameter. These values, of course, fail by orders of magnitude, but he is to be commended for this attempt at determining the physical dimensions of the comet.

The 1472 comet was visible from Christmas Day 1471 to 1 March 1472 (Julian Calendar), a total of 59 days.[8]

In 1475, Regiomontanus was called to Rome by Pope Sixtus IV on to work on the planned calendar reform. Sixtus promised substantial rewards, including the title of bishop of Regensburg,[9][10] but it is unlikely that he was actually appointed to the role.[3]

On his way to Rome, stopping in Venice, he commissioned the publication of his Calendarium with Erhard Ratdolt (printed in 1476).[11] Regiomontanus reached Rome, but he died there after only a few months, in his 41st year, on 6 July 1476. According to a rumor repeated by Gassendi in his Regiomontanus biography, he was poisoned by relatives of George of Trebizond whom he had criticized in his writing; it is however considered more likely that he died from the plague.[1]

Work edit

 
De triangulis planis et sphaericis libri
 
Title page for Qvesta opra da ogni parte e un libro doro, 1476

During his time in Italy he completed Peuerbach's abridgement of Almagest, Epytoma in almagesti Ptolemei. In 1464, he completed De triangulis omnimodis ("On Triangles of All Kinds"). De triangulis omnimodis was one of the first textbooks presenting the current state of trigonometry and included lists of questions for review of individual chapters. In it he wrote:

You who wish to study great and wonderful things, who wonder about the movement of the stars, must read these theorems about triangles. Knowing these ideas will open the door to all of astronomy and to certain geometric problems.

His work on arithmetic and algebra, Algorithmus Demonstratus, was among the first containing symbolic algebra.[12] In 1465, he built a portable sundial for Pope Paul II.

In Epytoma in almagesti Ptolemei, he critiqued the translation of Almagest by George of Trebizond, pointing out inaccuracies. Later Nicolaus Copernicus would refer to this book as an influence on his own work.

A prolific author, Regiomontanus was internationally famous in his lifetime. Despite having completed only a quarter of what he had intended to write, he left a substantial body of work. Nicolaus Copernicus' teacher, Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara, referred to Regiomontanus as having been his own teacher. There is speculation that Regiomontanus had arrived at a theory of heliocentrism before he died; a manuscript shows particular attention to the heliocentric theory of the Pythagorean Aristarchus, mention was also given to the motion of the earth in a letter to a friend.[13]

Much of the material on spherical trigonometry in Regiomontanus' On Triangles was taken directly[dubious ] from the twelfth-century work of Jabir ibn Aflah otherwise known as Geber, as noted in the sixteenth century by Gerolamo Cardano.[14]

Publications edit

  • Ephemerides (in Latin). Venezia: Peter Liechtenstein. 1498.
  • De triangulis planis et sphaericis libri (in Latin). Bern: Heinrich Petri & Peter Perna. 1561.

Legacy edit

Simon Stevin, in his book describing decimal representation of fractions (De Thiende), cites the trigonometric tables of Regiomontanus as suggestive of positional notation.[15]

Regiomontanus designed his own astrological house system, which became one of the most popular systems in Europe.[16]

In 1561, Daniel Santbech compiled a collected edition of the works of Regiomontanus, De triangulis planis et sphaericis libri quinque (first published in 1533) and Compositio tabularum sinum recto, as well as Santbech's own Problematum astronomicorum et geometricorum sectiones septem. It was published in Basel by Henrich Petri and Petrus Perna.

There is an image of him in Hartmann Schedel's 1493 Nuremberg Chronicle. He is holding an astrolabe.[b] Yet, although there are thirteen illustrations of comets in the Chronicle (from 471 to 1472), they are stylized, rather than representing the actual objects.[c]

The crater Regiomontanus on the Moon is named after him.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ See NASA: parallax.
  2. ^ See image.
  3. ^ See image.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Regiomontanus", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  2. ^ a b Folkerts, Menso; Kühne, Andreas (2003), "Regiomontan(us) (eigentlich Müller, auch Francus, Germanus), Johannes", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 21, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 270–271{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link); (full text online)
  3. ^ a b c   Hagen, Johann Georg (1911). "Johann Müller (Regiomontanus)". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 10. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  4. ^ a b Clerke, Agnes Mary (1911). "Regiomontanus" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  5. ^ Mosley, Adam (1999). "Regiomontanus and Astrology". Cambridge University: History and Philosophy of Science Department. Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  6. ^ Denis Roegel, "A reconstruction of the tables of Rheticus' Canon doctrinæ triangulorum (1551)", 2010.
  7. ^ David A. Seargeant. The Greatest Comets in History, 2009, p. 104
  8. ^ Donald K. Yeomans, Jet Propulsion Laboratory: Great Comets in History, 2007.
  9. ^ Boffut, Carl (1804). Versuch einer allgemeinen Geschichte der Mathematik (in German). L. G. Hoffmann. p. 351.
  10. ^ Rudolf Schmidt, Regiomontanus, Johann in: Deutsche Buchhändler. Deutsche Buchdrucker vol. 5 (1908), 797f.
  11. ^ "Erhard Ratdolt". Open Book. University of Utah. 17 March 2014. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  12. ^ Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Regiomontanus" . New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
  13. ^ Arthur Koestler, The Sleepwalkers, Penguin Books, 1959, p. 212.
  14. ^ Victor J. Katz, ed. (2007). . Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11485-9. Archived from the original on 1 October 2016. Retrieved 16 March 2008., p.4
  15. ^ E. J. Dijksterhuis (1970) Simon Stevin: Science in the Netherlands around 1600, pages 17–19, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Dutch original 1943
  16. ^ Lewis, James R. (1 March 2003). The Astrology Book: The Encyclopedia of Heavenly Influences. Visible Ink Press. p. 574. ISBN 978-1-57859-144-2. Retrieved 4 August 2012.

Further reading edit

  • Irmela Bues, Johannes Regiomontanus (1436–1476). In: Fränkische Lebensbilder 11. Neustadt/Aisch 1984, pp. 28–43
  • Rudolf Mett: Regiomontanus. Wegbereiter des neuen Weltbildes. Teubner / Vieweg, Stuttgart / Leipzig 1996, ISBN 3-8154-2510-7
  • Helmuth Gericke: Mathematik im Abendland: Von den römischen Feldmessern bis zu Descartes. Springer-Verlag, Berlin 1990, ISBN 3-540-51206-3
  • Günther Harmann (Hrsg.): Regiomontanus-Studien. (= Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philosophisch-historische Klasse, Sitzungsberichte, Bd. 364; Veröffentlichungen der Kommission für Geschichte der Mathematik, Naturwissenschaften und Medizin, volumes 28–30), Vienna 1980. ISBN 3-7001-0339-5
  • Samuel Eliot Morison, Christopher Columbus, Mariner, Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1955.
  • Ralf Kern: Wissenschaftliche Instrumente in ihrer Zeit/Band 1. Vom Astrolab zum mathematischen Besteck. Köln, 2010. ISBN 978-3-86560-865-9
  • Michela Malpangotto, Regiomontano e il rinnovamento del sapere matematico e astronomico nel Quattrocento, Cacucci, 2008 (with the critical edition of Oratio in praelectione Alfragani, Editorial Programm, Preface to the Dialogus inter Viennensem et Cracoviensem adversus Gerardi Cremonensis in planetarum theoricas deliramenta)
  • Ernst Zinner: Leben und Wirken des Joh. Müller von Königsberg, genannt Regiomontanus; Translated into English by Ezra A. Brown as Regiomontanus: His Life and Work

External links edit

  • "Regiomontanus". Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German).
  • Günther (1885), "Johannes Müller Regiomontanus", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), vol. 22, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 564–581
  • Adam Mosley, Regiomontanus Biography, web site at the Department of History and Philosophy of Science of the University of Cambridge (1999).
  • Electronic facsimile-editions of the rare book collection at the Vienna Institute of Astronomy
  • Regiomontanus and Calendar Reform
  • , Venedig 1485, Digitalisat
  • Beitrag bei „Astronomie in Nürnberg“ " 24 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine"
  • —SICD der Universitäten von Strasbourg
  • "Regiomontanus" . The American Cyclopædia. 1879.
  • "Regiomontanus" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 20 (9th ed.). 1886.
  • Regiomontanus at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • Online Galleries, History of Science Collections, University of Oklahoma Libraries ( 8 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine). High resolution images of works by and/or portraits of Regiomontanus in JPEG and TIFF formats.
  • Regiomontanus, Joannes, 1436–1476. Calendarium. Venice, Bernhard Maler Pictor, Erhard Ratdolt, Peter Löslein, 1476. [32] leaves. woodcuts: border, diagrs. (1 movable, 1 with brass pointer) 29.6 cm. (4to). From the Lessing J. Rosenwald Collection in the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
  • Doctissimi viri et mathematicarum disciplinarum eximii professoris Ioannis de Regio Monte De triangvlis omnímodis libri qvinqve From the Rare Book and Special Collection Division at the Library of Congress
  • Regiomontanus' Defensio Theonis digital edition (scans and transcription)

regiomontanus, lunar, crater, crater, johannes, müller, königsberg, june, 1436, july, 1476, better, known, mathematician, astrologer, astronomer, german, renaissance, active, vienna, buda, nuremberg, contributions, were, instrumental, development, copernican, . For the lunar crater see Regiomontanus crater Johannes Muller von Konigsberg 6 June 1436 6 July 1476 1 better known as Regiomontanus ˌ r iː dʒ i oʊ m ɒ n ˈ t eɪ n e s was a mathematician astrologer and astronomer of the German Renaissance active in Vienna Buda and Nuremberg His contributions were instrumental in the development of Copernican heliocentrism in the decades following his death Regiomontanus18th century portrait Iohannes de Regio Monte dictus alias Mullerus Born6 June 1436Konigsberg Electorate of Saxony Holy Roman EmpireDied6 July 1476 1476 07 06 aged 40 Rome Papal StatesNationalityGermanEducationUniversity of Leipzig no degree University of Vienna B A 1452 M A 1457 Known forFounding the world s first scientific printing pressPublishing the first printed astronomical textbook 1472 and the first trigonometric tables posthum 1490 Tangent tablesScientific careerFieldsMathematics trigonometry astronomy astrologyInstitutionsUniversitas IstropolitanaAcademic advisorsGeorg von PeuerbachBasilios BessarionNotable studentsDomenico Novara da FerraraRegiomontanus wrote under the Latinized name of Ioannes de Monteregio or Monte Regio Regio Monte the toponym Regiomontanus was first used by Philipp Melanchthon in 1534 He is named after Konigsberg in Lower Franconia not the larger Konigsberg modern Kaliningrad in Prussia Contents 1 Life 2 Work 3 Publications 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife edit nbsp Plaque at Regiomontanus birthplace nbsp Regiomontanus nbsp Comet of 1472Woodcuts from the 1493 Nuremberg Chronicle Although little is known of Regiomontanus early life it is believed that at eleven years of age he became a student at the University of Leipzig Saxony In 1451 he continued his studies at Alma Mater Rudolfina the university in Vienna in the Duchy of Austria where he became a pupil and friend of Georg von Peuerbach In 1452 he was awarded his bachelor s degree baccalaureus and he was awarded his master s degree magister artium at the age of 21 in 1457 2 He lectured in optics and ancient literature 3 In 1460 the papal legate Basilios Bessarion came to Vienna on a diplomatic mission Being a humanist scholar with a great interest in the mathematical sciences Bessarion sought out Peuerbach s company George of Trebizond who was Bessarion s philosophical rival had recently produced a new Latin translation of Ptolemy s Almagest from the Greek which Bessarion correctly regarded as inaccurate and badly translated so he asked Peuerbach to produce a new one Peuerbach s Greek was not good enough to do a translation but he knew the Almagest intimately so instead he started work on a modernised improved abridgement of the work Bessarion also invited Peuerbach to become part of his household and to accompany him back to Italy when his work in Vienna was finished Peuerbach accepted the invitation on the condition that Regiomontanus could also accompany them However Peuerbach fell ill in 1461 and died having completed only the first six books of his abridgement of the Almagest On his death bed Peuerbach made Regiomontanus promise to finish the book and publish it 1 3 In 1461 Regiomontanus left Vienna with Bessarion and spent the next four years travelling around Northern Italy as a member of Bessarion s household looking for and copying mathematical and astronomical manuscripts for Bessarion who possessed the largest private library in Europe at the time Regiomontanus also made the acquaintance of the leading Italian mathematicians of the age such as Giovanni Bianchini and Paolo dal Pozzo Toscanelli who had also been friends of Peuerbach during his prolonged stay in Italy more than twenty years earlier 1 In 1467 he went to work for Janos Vitez archbishop of Esztergom There he calculated extensive astronomical tables and built astronomical instruments 2 Next he went to Buda and the court of Matthias Corvinus of Hungary for whom he built an astrolabe and where he collated Greek manuscripts for a handsome salary 4 The trigonometric tables that he created while living in Hungary his Tabulae directionum profectionumque printed posthum 1490 were designed for astrology including finding astrological houses 5 The Tabulae also contained several tangent tables 6 In 1471 Regiomontanus moved to the Free City of Nuremberg in Franconia then one of the Empire s important seats of learning publication commerce and art where he worked with the humanist and merchant Bernhard Walther 4 Here he founded the world s first scientific printing press and in 1472 he published the first printed astronomical textbook the Theoricae novae Planetarum of his teacher Georg von Peurbach 1 Regiomontanus and Bernhard Walther observed the comet of 1472 Regiomontanus tried to estimate its distance from Earth using the angle of parallax a According to David A Seargeant 7 In agreement with the prevailing Aristotelian theory on comets as atmospheric phenomena he estimated its distance to be at least 8 200 miles 13 120 km and from this estimated the central condensation as 26 and the entire coma as 81 miles 41 6 and 129 6 km respectively in diameter These values of course fail by orders of magnitude but he is to be commended for this attempt at determining the physical dimensions of the comet The 1472 comet was visible from Christmas Day 1471 to 1 March 1472 Julian Calendar a total of 59 days 8 In 1475 Regiomontanus was called to Rome by Pope Sixtus IV on to work on the planned calendar reform Sixtus promised substantial rewards including the title of bishop of Regensburg 9 10 but it is unlikely that he was actually appointed to the role 3 On his way to Rome stopping in Venice he commissioned the publication of his Calendarium with Erhard Ratdolt printed in 1476 11 Regiomontanus reached Rome but he died there after only a few months in his 41st year on 6 July 1476 According to a rumor repeated by Gassendi in his Regiomontanus biography he was poisoned by relatives of George of Trebizond whom he had criticized in his writing it is however considered more likely that he died from the plague 1 Work edit nbsp De triangulis planis et sphaericis libri nbsp Title page for Qvesta opra da ogni parte e un libro doro 1476During his time in Italy he completed Peuerbach s abridgement of Almagest Epytoma in almagesti Ptolemei In 1464 he completed De triangulis omnimodis On Triangles of All Kinds De triangulis omnimodis was one of the first textbooks presenting the current state of trigonometry and included lists of questions for review of individual chapters In it he wrote You who wish to study great and wonderful things who wonder about the movement of the stars must read these theorems about triangles Knowing these ideas will open the door to all of astronomy and to certain geometric problems His work on arithmetic and algebra Algorithmus Demonstratus was among the first containing symbolic algebra 12 In 1465 he built a portable sundial for Pope Paul II In Epytoma in almagesti Ptolemei he critiqued the translation of Almagest by George of Trebizond pointing out inaccuracies Later Nicolaus Copernicus would refer to this book as an influence on his own work A prolific author Regiomontanus was internationally famous in his lifetime Despite having completed only a quarter of what he had intended to write he left a substantial body of work Nicolaus Copernicus teacher Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara referred to Regiomontanus as having been his own teacher There is speculation that Regiomontanus had arrived at a theory of heliocentrism before he died a manuscript shows particular attention to the heliocentric theory of the Pythagorean Aristarchus mention was also given to the motion of the earth in a letter to a friend 13 Much of the material on spherical trigonometry in Regiomontanus On Triangles was taken directly dubious discuss from the twelfth century work of Jabir ibn Aflah otherwise known as Geber as noted in the sixteenth century by Gerolamo Cardano 14 Publications editEphemerides in Latin Venezia Peter Liechtenstein 1498 De triangulis planis et sphaericis libri in Latin Bern Heinrich Petri amp Peter Perna 1561 Legacy editSimon Stevin in his book describing decimal representation of fractions De Thiende cites the trigonometric tables of Regiomontanus as suggestive of positional notation 15 Regiomontanus designed his own astrological house system which became one of the most popular systems in Europe 16 In 1561 Daniel Santbech compiled a collected edition of the works of Regiomontanus De triangulis planis et sphaericis libri quinque first published in 1533 and Compositio tabularum sinum recto as well as Santbech s own Problematum astronomicorum et geometricorum sectiones septem It was published in Basel by Henrich Petri and Petrus Perna There is an image of him in Hartmann Schedel s 1493 Nuremberg Chronicle He is holding an astrolabe b Yet although there are thirteen illustrations of comets in the Chronicle from 471 to 1472 they are stylized rather than representing the actual objects c The crater Regiomontanus on the Moon is named after him See also editList of unsolved deaths Regiomontanus angle maximization problemNotes edit See NASA parallax See image See image References edit a b c d e O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Regiomontanus MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews a b Folkerts Menso Kuhne Andreas 2003 Regiomontan us eigentlich Muller auch Francus Germanus Johannes Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 21 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 270 271 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link full text online a b c nbsp Hagen Johann Georg 1911 Johann Muller Regiomontanus In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 10 New York Robert Appleton Company a b Clerke Agnes Mary 1911 Regiomontanus In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Mosley Adam 1999 Regiomontanus and Astrology Cambridge University History and Philosophy of Science Department Retrieved 12 June 2013 Denis Roegel A reconstruction of the tables of Rheticus Canon doctrinae triangulorum 1551 2010 David A Seargeant The Greatest Comets in History 2009 p 104 Donald K Yeomans Jet Propulsion Laboratory Great Comets in History 2007 Boffut Carl 1804 Versuch einer allgemeinen Geschichte der Mathematik in German L G Hoffmann p 351 Rudolf Schmidt Regiomontanus Johann in Deutsche Buchhandler Deutsche Buchdrucker vol 5 1908 797f Erhard Ratdolt Open Book University of Utah 17 March 2014 Retrieved 21 May 2019 Gilman D C Peck H T Colby F M eds 1905 Regiomontanus New International Encyclopedia 1st ed New York Dodd Mead Arthur Koestler The Sleepwalkers Penguin Books 1959 p 212 Victor J Katz ed 2007 The mathematics of Egypt Mesopotamia China India and Islam a sourcebook Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11485 9 Archived from the original on 1 October 2016 Retrieved 16 March 2008 p 4 E J Dijksterhuis 1970 Simon Stevin Science in the Netherlands around 1600 pages 17 19 Martinus Nijhoff Publishers Dutch original 1943 Lewis James R 1 March 2003 The Astrology Book The Encyclopedia of Heavenly Influences Visible Ink Press p 574 ISBN 978 1 57859 144 2 Retrieved 4 August 2012 Further reading editIrmela Bues Johannes Regiomontanus 1436 1476 In Frankische Lebensbilder 11 Neustadt Aisch 1984 pp 28 43 Rudolf Mett Regiomontanus Wegbereiter des neuen Weltbildes Teubner Vieweg Stuttgart Leipzig 1996 ISBN 3 8154 2510 7 Helmuth Gericke Mathematik im Abendland Von den romischen Feldmessern bis zu Descartes Springer Verlag Berlin 1990 ISBN 3 540 51206 3 Gunther Harmann Hrsg Regiomontanus Studien Osterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften Philosophisch historische Klasse Sitzungsberichte Bd 364 Veroffentlichungen der Kommission fur Geschichte der Mathematik Naturwissenschaften und Medizin volumes 28 30 Vienna 1980 ISBN 3 7001 0339 5 Samuel Eliot Morison Christopher Columbus Mariner Boston Little Brown and Company 1955 Ralf Kern Wissenschaftliche Instrumente in ihrer Zeit Band 1 Vom Astrolab zum mathematischen Besteck Koln 2010 ISBN 978 3 86560 865 9 Michela Malpangotto Regiomontano e il rinnovamento del sapere matematico e astronomico nel Quattrocento Cacucci 2008 with the critical edition of Oratio in praelectione Alfragani Editorial Programm Preface to the Dialogus inter Viennensem et Cracoviensem adversus Gerardi Cremonensis in planetarum theoricas deliramenta Ernst Zinner Leben und Wirken des Joh Muller von Konigsberg genannt Regiomontanus Translated into English by Ezra A Brown as Regiomontanus His Life and WorkExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Johannes Regiomontanus Regiomontanus Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Gunther 1885 Johannes Muller Regiomontanus Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie ADB in German vol 22 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot pp 564 581 Adam Mosley Regiomontanus Biography web site at the Department of History and Philosophy of Science of the University of Cambridge 1999 Electronic facsimile editions of the rare book collection at the Vienna Institute of Astronomy Regiomontanus and Calendar Reform Polybiblio Regiomontanus Johannes Santbech Daniel ed De triangulis planis et sphaericis libri Basel Henrich Petri amp Petrus Perna 1561 Joannes Regiomontanus Calendarium Venedig 1485 Digitalisat Beitrag bei Astronomie in Nurnberg Archived 24 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine Digitalisierte Werke von Regiomontanus SICD der Universitaten von Strasbourg Regiomontanus The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Regiomontanus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 9th ed 1886 Regiomontanus at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Online Galleries History of Science Collections University of Oklahoma Libraries Archived 8 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine High resolution images of works by and or portraits of Regiomontanus in JPEG and TIFF formats Regiomontanus Joannes 1436 1476 Calendarium Venice Bernhard Maler Pictor Erhard Ratdolt Peter Loslein 1476 32 leaves woodcuts border diagrs 1 movable 1 with brass pointer 29 6 cm 4to From the Lessing J Rosenwald Collection in the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress Doctissimi viri et mathematicarum disciplinarum eximii professoris Ioannis de Regio Monte De triangvlis omnimodis libri qvinqve From the Rare Book and Special Collection Division at the Library of Congress Regiomontanus Defensio Theonis digital edition scans and transcription Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Regiomontanus amp oldid 1181922435, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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