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  1. Caspar Peucer (/ ˈ p ɔɪ k ər / POY-kər, [citation needed] German: [ˈkaspaʁ ˈpɔʏtsɐ]; January 6, 1525 – September 25, 1602) was a German reformer, physician, and scholar of Sorbian origin.

  2. And yet Caspar Peucer (1525–1602), who created his works in the spirit of Latin Humanism and who, moreover, fostered numerous contacts with Bohemian surroundings, is not mentioned in it. Peucer, a professor of Wittenberg’s university, was an all-around intellectual who devoted himself primarily to medicine, mathematics and astronomy, but ...

    • Jan Zdichynec
  3. Illustration of Caspar Peucer. Caspar Peucer (1525–1602) entered the University of Wittenburg in 1540. There, he studied astronomy, mathematics, and medicine under the teachings of Philipp Melanchthon , Erasmus Reinhold and Georg Joachim Rheticus .

  4. In his textbooks Caspar Peucer argued for the importance of studying astronomy; he also wrote on the new star of 1572, and defended certain aspects of astrology. Peucer was the child of Gregor Beucker, a Bürger of Bautzen, and Ottilie Simon.

    • Adam Mosley
  5. Caspar Peucer (auch Kaspar Peucer, Peucker; * 6. Januar 1525 in Budissin; † 25. September 1602 in Dessau) war als Kirchenreformer, Mathematiker, Astronom, Mediziner, Diplomat und Schriftsteller ein wichtiger Vertreter des deutschen Späthumanismus .

  6. Caspar Peucer. * 6. Januar 1525 in Budissin; † 25. September 1602 in Dessau. Mediziner, Mathematiker, Astrologe, Humanist. Nach dem Tod seines Schwiegervaters, Philipp Melanchthon, wurde er zum Wahrer dessen Erbes.

  7. Focusing on the work of Caspar Peucer (1522–1603), Brosseder highlights the complexity of astrology in its inter-relatedness to astronomy, natural philosophy, history, anthropology, hermeneutics, and, not least, theology.