Johannes Stadius

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For the crater, see Stadius (crater).

Johannes Stadius or Estadius (Flemish, Jan Van Ostaeyen; French, Jean Stade) (ca. May 1, 1527-June 17, 1579) was a Flemish astronomer, astrologer, and mathematician.

Born Jan Van Ostaeyen in the town of Loenhout (thus Leonnouthesius is sometimes appended to his Latin surname) in Brabant, Stadius spent his youth in the Schaliënhuis, on the old Dorpsstraat and one of the oldest houses in Loenhout (today a tavern and restaurant). Not much else is known regarding his youth besides the fact that his mother was not the spouse of his father.

After receiving his education at the school of Latin at Brecht, Stadius studied mathematics, geography, and history at the University of Leuven, where he studied under Gemma Frisius. After his studies in Leuven, he became a professor (hoogleraar) of mathematics, but in 1554 he went to Turin, where he enjoyed the patronage of the powerful Duke of Savoy.

Stadius also worked in Paris, Cologne, and Brussels. In Paris, he debated with the trigonometrist Maurice Bresses of Grenoble, and made astrological predictions for the French court. In his Tabulae Bergenses (1560), Stadius calls himself both royal mathematician (of Philip II of Spain) and mathematician to the Duke of Savoy.[1]

Contents

[edit] Ephemerides

During his stay in Brussels, his first work appeared: Ephemerides novae at auctae, first published by Arnold Birckmann of Cologne in 1554. An ephemeris (plural: ephemerides) (from the Greek word ephemeros, "daily") was, traditionally, a table providing the positions (given in a Cartesian coordinate system, or in right ascension and declination or, for astrologers, in longitude along the zodiacal ecliptic), of the Sun, the Moon, and the planets in the sky at a given moment in time; the astrological positions are usually given for either noon or midnight depending on the particular ephemeris that is used.

This work, read by Tycho Brahe and Nostradamus, posited a link between mathematics and medicine. Stadius had been encouraged to publish it by his old teacher Gemma Frisius, who in 1555 urged Stadius not to fear being accused of believing that the earth was not stationary while the sun stood still (as Copernicus had), or for abandoning the medieval Alfonsine Tables in favor of his own observations. In this 1555 letter from Frisius that was published in several editions of Ephemerides, Stadius' old teacher wrote that the system devised by Copernicus gave a better understanding of planetary distances, as well as certain features of retrograde motion.

[edit] Death and Legacy

In Paris, he died and was buried. On his epitaph it indicates that he died on June 17, 1579 and that he had lived 52 years and almost 2 months. It is for this reason that the suspected birth date of Stadius is May 1, 1527.[2]

The lunar crater Stadius is named after him.

[edit] External links

[edit] Further reading

  • Emalsteen, Jos, Oudheid en Kunst (Brecht, 1927).
  • Ernalsteen, Jozef A.U., Joannes Stadius Leonnouthesius 1527-1579 (LZ Antwerpen-Brecht 938.1).
  • Gingerich, Owen, "From Copernicus to Kepler: Heliocentrism as Model and as Reality," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 117 (1973), N6, pp. 513-522.
  • Weyns, A.J., Vlaamse Stam 1977: nr.11, pp. 584-587.