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  2. Frombork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frombork

    In 1519 Copernicus wrote to the King of Poland, asking for help against the Teutonic Knights who were threatening the city. The letter however was intercepted, and the Teutonic Knights took and burned the city (Copernicus and other canons had left the city shortly before). [11] Frawenburg at the Frisch Haff in 1684 (by Christoph Hartknoch)

  3. Archcathedral Basilica of the Assumption of the Blessed ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archcathedral_Basilica_of...

    The astronomer and mathematician Nicolaus Copernicus worked here as a canon (1512–1516 and 1522–1543). He wrote his epochal work, De revolutionibus orbium cœlestium in Frombork. [4] Shortly after its 1543 publication, Copernicus died there and was buried in the cathedral where his grave was thought to have been found by archaeologists in 2005.

  4. Nicolaus Copernicus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolaus_Copernicus

    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, [10] [11] to German-speaking parents. [12] His father was a merchant from Kraków and his mother was the daughter of a wealthy Toruń merchant. [13] Nicolaus was the youngest of four children.

  5. List of people burned as heretics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_burned_as...

    [1] Canon 3 of the ecumenical Fourth Council of the Lateran, 1215 required secular authorities to "exterminate in the territories subject to their jurisdiction all heretics" pointed out by the Catholic Church, [2] resulting in the inquisitor executing certain people accused of heresy. Some laws allowed the civil government to employ punishment.

  6. Nicolaus Copernicus Monument, Toruń - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolaus_Copernicus...

    Astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543) lived in Thorn (Toruń), then in the Kingdom of Poland, for many years. In the late 18th century, Poland was partitioned and the city of Thorn passed to Prussia. From 1807 to 1813, the city was part of the Duchy of Warsaw, governed by Frederick Augustus I of Saxony.

  7. Wittenberg interpretation of Copernicus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wittenberg_interpretation...

    The Church also emphasized that Copernicus’s theory was against scripture and believed that the world revolved around the Earth and were persistent with the Earth being in the center. Some science was frowned upon by the church because it was uncertain in the Bible, and certain knowledge of physics is not necessary to human salvation. [13]

  8. Toruń - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toruń

    John the Evangelist and John the Baptist, an aisled hall church built in the 14th century and extended in the 15th century; outstanding Gothic sculptures and paintings inside (Moses, St. Mary Magdalene, gravestone of Johann von Soest), Renaissance and Baroque epitaphs and altars (among them the epitaph of Copernicus from 1580), as well as the ...

  9. Science and the Catholic Church - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Science_and_the_Catholic_Church

    During this period, the Church was also a major patron of engineering for the construction of elaborate cathedrals. Since the Renaissance, Catholic scientists have been credited as fathers of a diverse range of scientific fields: Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) pioneered heliocentrism, René Descartes (1596-1650) father of analytical geometry and co-founder of modern philosophy, Jean-Baptiste ...