Copernicus Reburied With Honors

by Nancy Atkinson on May 24, 2010

The remains of astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus were reburied with special honors during a Roman Catholic ceremony, interred beneath the altar of Frombork Cathedral in northern Poland. Copernicus had been buried in an unmarked grave in 1543, and his remains were not conclusively identified until 2005, through DNA testing.

Although he was not the first to ever have the idea, Copernicus proposed that the earth revolved around the sun — contrary to the medieval belief that the earth was the center of the universe.

Copernicus is best known for his treatise “On the Revolution of the Celestial Spheres.” His theories were viewed with suspicion by the Church, and his treatise was not published until after he died.

Eventually the theory became the cornerstone for a future generation of scientists including Kepler and Galileo, but one of its ardent advocates, Italian cleric Giordano Bruno, was burned at the stake as a heretic in 1600.

The DNA analysis of two strands of hair from a book that Copernicus owned – Calendarium Romanum Magnum, by Johannes Stoeffler – match the DNA of a tooth and femur bone taken from the remains at Frombork.

Radar was used to search for Copernicus’ remains underneath the floor of the cathedral.

Source: Reuters


  • DrFlimmer

    Even the Church is able to learn ;)

  • IVAN3MAN_AT_LARGE

    @ DrFlimmer,

    Yeah, unlike those “Electric Universe” nutters!

    (Sorry, but it needed saying!)

  • DrFlimmer

    Ivan3man,

    you are a bit unfair here. The Church had a few hundred years to learn its lesson, so should give our good friends here at least that much time.
    We should talk about such things again in, say, 537 years. Maybe then you can be sure about what you say.

    ;)

  • Torbjorn Larsson OM

    Polymath Copernicus had his fights with the church, but perhaps mostly because locals didn’t want him as layman official for the position his influential uncle pressed for. Later he ended up as a church secretary and physician.

    The RCC involvement is likely mostly trying to capitalize on the position of a dead man. It’s called religious “morals”.

    Bruno was charged for so much that it is hard to say how much the Copernican theory cost him. But he was a tragic loss, he got so much correct from mere synthesis of data and he asked important questions that only much later was tested.

  • http://home.comcast.net/~jacobsdale/AquaFarmIN.pps Aqua

    One wonders that if in the distant future, data mining by then cyber-archeologists might stumble across some of the posts from this website and posit an opine on the participants?

    Remember, everything you’ve ever posted on-line, every keystroke, has been recorded somewhere…

    @Dr. Flimmer, you seem to be very ‘level headed’ in your posting(s). It is appreciated.

    We are indeed, ‘babes in the wood’ when it comes to our understanding of the workings of our universe. No doubt many now accepted as truth theories, will later be discredited as ‘early’ if misguided attempts to reveal the true nature of reality.

  • ND

    Aqua,

    How about this,

    “Given our study of the ancient Internet, it would appear that many used the network to attack and loudly voice opinions on mainstream science, with deep ignorance of the subject matter, earlier than we had presumed. Their behavior is very reactionary to criticism as well as to patient explanations of the phenomenon being discussed. Some who have debated these individuals themselves become inpatient and reactionary, as if suffering from a very mild case of PTSD.”

    Yes things are recorded, and bookmarked and googlable! The EU/PC proponents have been leaving a trail across many a web forum.

  • hydrazine

    The AP piece gets one thing wrong though. Contrary to a common belief voiced also in this video Copernicus was never condemned by the Catholic Church. Several decades after his death, however, the “De Revolutionibus” was put on the so called Index as unclear on its position regarding the Pythagorean philosophy (which is contrary to the Christian teaching on, like, most points). The book was not labelled as prohibited, mind you, but as requiring some clarifications and thus unsuitable for reading until those corrections were introduced. Copernicus’ “unedited” work was removed from the Index some century and a half later during a revision of the list by pope Benedict XIV. Accidentally, one of Copernicus’ strongest critics was Luther who by then was definitely not a member of catholic clergy. Copernicus’ hypothesis was viewed with great suspicion by many including numerous catholic officials but facts should be kept straight even from a perspective of 600 years.

    Kind regards,
    /hydrazine

  • Olaf

    Here in Belgium this has this Mercator museum. Interesting is that the Catholic maps were completely wrong compared to the rest of the world maps since they tried to put the bible in there. They even put Eden on it!

    I am amazed that they found Jerusalem during the crusades with these types of maps.

  • ND

    Olaf,

    And where did they place Eden?

  • http://home.comcast.net/~jacobsdale/AquaFarmIN.pps Aqua

    @ND Thanks for the comment… I like~ and laugh! Very creative.

    I think it laughable that there are those who would ‘burn at the stake’ anyone who even mentions electro dynamics as being part of the cosmos. Its as though they never fully recovered from sticking a finger in an electric socket as a child(?), then blamed N. Tesla for inventing alternating current and have been angry since!

    Those individuals should not be allowed to use photo voltaic devices – ever.

    Moral: Don’t stick your finger in electric sockets!

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