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  1. Simon Marius (January 20, 1573 - December 26, 1624) Simon Mayr (Latinized Marius) was born in Gunzenhausen, Bavaria, on January 20, 1573. In 1586, he joined the Margrave of Ansbach's Capella and school. He was in the capella for three years, and in the school until 1801, when he was 26 years old. In the following, he went to Prague to join ...

  2. 19 de oct. de 2023 · Simon Marius, known in Latin as Simon Mayr, was born on January 10, 1573, in Gunzenhausen, near Nuremberg, Germany. Emerging during an era of unprecedented advances in astronomy, Marius is most prominently recognized for his independent discovery of the four major moons of Jupiter around the same time as Galileo Galilei.

  3. 1 de nov. de 2018 · Born Simon Mayr (later Latinized to Marius) on January 10, 1573, in Gunzenhausen in the region of the Markgrafschaft of Ansbach (Bavaria, south Germany), where his father served as mayor of the city in 1576. From 1586 to 1601, he studied on and off at the Markgrafschaft’s Lutheran academy at Heilsbronn.

  4. Simon Marius. 1573-1624. German astronomer among the first to use the telescope for viewing celestial objects. He discovered Jupiter's satellites, if not before then shortly after Galileo, but waited until 1614 to publish his observations. Marius computed tables of the mean periodic motions of the Jovian satellites, directed attention to ...

  5. 20 de jun. de 2019 · Simon Marius was by no means the only astrologer in the early modern period who wrote and published a Tabulae Directionum. The most well-known was produced by another Franconian astrologer, Johannes Müller (1436–1476), better known as Regiomontanus .

  6. 20 de ene. de 2023 · Simon Marius, a German astronomer, was born Jan. 20, 1573. Marius was born in Gunzenhausen, and died in Anspach, neither town very far from Nuremberg, so he was Bavarian through and through. In 1614, Marius created quite a sensation with the publication of his book, Mundius jovialis, a book we do not, alas, have in our collections.

  7. Simon Marius. Simon Marius (latinized form of Simon Mayr; 10 January 1573 – 5 January 1625) was a German astronomer. He was born in Gunzenhausen, near Nuremberg, but spent most of his life in the city of Ansbach. Read more on Wikipedia. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Simon Marius has received more than 161,486 page views.