Regiomontanus
Johannes MÃÂüller von KÃÂönigsberg (June 6, 1436 - July 6, 1476), Latin name Regiomontanus, was an important mathematician and astronomer of the 15th century. He was born in KÃÂönigsberg village Unfinden in Franconia.
He is also called Johannes MÃÂüller, der KÃÂönigsberger. His Latin full name is Joannes de Regio monte, which shortens to Regiomontanus (translation of "KÃÂönigsberg" or "King's Mountain").
A son of a miller, at eleven years of age, he became a student at Leipzig, Saxony university. Three years later he continued his studies at the Alma Mater Rudolfina in Vienna, Austria. There he became a pupil and friend of Georg von Peurbach. In 1457 he graduated with the degree "magister artium" and held lectures in optics and antique literature. In the same year he built an astrolabium for Maximilian I, in 1465 a portable sundial for pope Paul II. The work with Peurbach brought him to the writings of Nikolaus von Kues (or Cusanus) who had a heliocentric approach. However, Regiomontanus remained geocentric following Ptolemy's work. After Peurbach died he continued his translation of Ptolemy's Almagest which was initiated by Johannes Bessarion. From 1461-65 Regiomontanus lived and worked at Cardinal Bessarion's house in Rome. He wrote De Triangulis omnimodus (1464) and Epytoma in almagesti ptolemei. De Triangulis was one of the first textbooks, presenting the current state of trigonometry including a kind of repetitorium (list question for recapitulating each chapter). 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.
In 1471 Johannes MÃÂüller moved to the Free City of Nuremberg in Franconia, which at that time was one of the most important places of learning, publication, commerce, artistry etc of the empire. Regiomontanus remains known for building the first astronomical observatory of Germany, perhaps of Europe, at Nuremberg. He made and printed many astronomical charts.
In 1475 he went to work with Pope Sixtus IV in Rome on calendar reform. While in Rome, MÃÂüller died mysteriously; some say of the plague, others (more feasibly) of assassination. It was July 6, 1476, and he had just turned forty exactly one month earlier.
Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara, the teacher of Nicolaus Copernicus, referred to Regiomontanus as having been his teacher.
Johannes MÃÂüller was internationally famous already during his lifetime. He was a very active writer. Despite his plans for writing four times the volume he actually did get to finish, he left us a number of works.
It is not true that after his death he simply became known for the place of his birth, KÃÂönigsberg or in Latin: Regiomontanus. In fact, the story is much more interesting: It happens that in the time of MÃÂüller it was common for scholars to author their works under Latin pennames. Copernicus did likewise and that is why we do not know him as Zepernik, as he was really called. By the same token, the only reason we know Regiomontanus by this place-name is that we can only know him, as is true for everyone sooner or later, by the very words he wrote.