Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Albert Brudzewski, also Albert Blar (of Brudzewo), Albert of Brudzewo or Wojciech Brudzewski (in Latin, Albertus de Brudzewo; c.1445–c.1497) was a Polish astronomer, mathematician, philosopher and diplomat.

  2. 17 mag 2024 · Il movimento della Terra: Il fattore umano. 17 Maggio 2024. 3 Min Read. Add Comment. Si conclude "Il movimento della Terra", manga storico di Uoto dedicato alla teoria dell'eliocentrismo, con un volume che ci permette di scoprire un astronomo che giocò un ruolo importante nella vita di Copernico.

  3. 24 dic 2016 · Born Brudzewo, Poland, 1446. Died Vilnius, (Lithuania), 1497. Albert Brudzewski lectured on planetary motions at the University of Cracow, where Nicolaus Copernicus may have studied with him. Brudzewski studied in Cracow, where he received his bachelor’s degree in 1470 and his master’s in 1474.

    • Jürgen Hamel
    • juergenhamel@t-online.de
  4. acearchive.org › albert-brudzewskiAlbert Brudzewski

    23 feb 2023 · Albert Brudzewski (c.1445-c.1497) was a Polish mathematician, philosopher, astronomer and diplomat. He taught at the Kraków Academy and is remembered for introducing modern teaching of astronomy by using up-to-date texts. His major contribution was stating that the Moon moves in an ellipse and always shows the same side to the Earth.

  5. Jürgen Hamel. 44 Accesses. Alternate names. Albertus Blar de Brudzewo. Download reference work entry PDF. Born Brudzewo, Poland, 1446. Died Vilnius, (Lithuania), 1497. Albert Brudzewski lectured on planetary motions at the University of Cracow, where Nicolaus Copernicus may have studied with him.

    • Jürgen Hamel
  6. Albert Brudzewski. Wojciech de Brudzewo. modifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata. Wojciech Brudzewski ou de Brudzewo, né le 6 avril 1445 à Brudzewo et mort vers 1497 à Vilnius, est un astronome, mathématicien, philosophe et diplomate polonais.

  7. Professor Albert Brudzewski- a scholar of Aristotelian philosophy who taught astronomy to select students in private. Under this influence, Copernicus was first exposed to Brudzewski’s commentary on Georg Peuerbach’s Theoricae Novae Planetarum.