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  1. Giovanni Battista Riccioli oder Giambattista Riccioli, latinisiert Johannes Baptista Ricciolus (* 17. April 1598 in Ferrara; † 25. Juni 1671 in Bologna ), war ein italienischer Priester (seit 1614 Jesuit) und Astronom. Bevor er sich ganz der Astronomie zuwandte, lehrte er viele Jahre an den Universitäten von Parma und Bologna Philosophie und ...

  2. Born at Ferrara in Italy, Riccioli was a Jesuit priest who spent most of his life at Bologna where he was professor of astronomy. In 1651 he produced his famous work Almagestum novum (The New Almagest). It is in this work that the system of naming craters and mountains on the Moon after famous astronomers was introduced.

  3. Autres informations. Giovanni Battista Riccioli (né le 17 avril 1598 à Ferrare et mort le 25 juin 1671 à Bologne) est un jésuite italien et un astronome. Il enseigne à l' université de Pavie et à celle de Bologne. Il est à l'origine de la nomenclature de la face visible de la Lune que nous utilisons toujours.

  4. Giovanni Battista Riccioli (17 d'abril de 1598, Ferrara – 25 de xunu de 1671, Boloña), foi un astrónomu xesuita italianu. Considérase un pioneru na astronomía llunar . [3]

  5. Giovanni Battista Riccioli. 1598-1671. Italian astronomer who discovered the first double star (1643) and proved instrumental in undermining Aristotelian cosmology. In Almagestum novum (1651) he maintained the identity of celestial and terrestrial matter and thus the corruptibility of the heavens.

  6. Other articles where Giovanni Battista Riccioli is discussed: Mizar: … found (by the Italian astronomer Giovanni Battista Riccioli in 1650) to be a visual binary—i.e., to consist of two optically distinguishable components revolving around each other. Later, each of the visual components was determined to be a spectroscopic binary; Mizar is actually a quadruple star. Apparent visual ...

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