Nicolaus Copernicus [Nikklas Koppernigk] (1473-1543).
Born on 19 February 1473 in Torun, Poland.
He first studied at Cracow from 1492 to 1494, then
in 1496 was sent to Italy to study Canon Law at the University of
Bologna.
In 1501 he began medical studies at the University
of Padua, and finally took his Law degree at the small
University of Ferrara in 1503.
In 1497, while still in Italy, he was made Canon of the Frombork
[Frauenberg] cathedral
by his maternal uncle and protector Lucas Watzenrode,
bishop of Varmia. This provided Copernicus with a
secure and relatively renumerative
position which he held to the end of his life, allowing
him the freedom to pursue his interest in astronomy.
Copernicus' landmark work
On the Revolutions
(De revolutionibus
orbium coelestium) was dedicated to Pope Paul III and
published in 1543 in Nurenberg, as Copernicus lay on
his deathbed. However, his heliocentric hypothesis had been circulating for
over 30 years, starting with his Commentariolus, written between
1512 and 1515 and circulated in manuscript form.
Georg Joachim Rheticus (1514-1574), who joined
Copernicus in Frombork in 1539 as his first and only disciple,
published in 1540 his Narratio Prima, a first account
of the Copernican planetary model.
Copernicus died on May 24 1543 in Frombork.
Bibliography:
Copernicus, N., On the Revolutions, edited and translated by E. Rosen,
The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
Rusinek, M. 1973, Land of Copernicus, Twaine Publishers, N.Y.
Aristotle
Ptolemy
Tycho
Kepler
Galileo