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"Copernicus" redirects here. For other uses, see Copernicus (disambiguation).
Nicolaus Copernicus (19 February 1473 – 24 May 1543) was the first astronomer to formulate a comprehensive heliocentric cosmology, which displaced the Earth from the center of the universe.[1] Copernicus' epochal book, De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres), published just before his death in 1543, is often regarded as the starting point of modern astronomy and the defining epiphany that began the scientific revolution. His heliocentric model, with the Sun at the center of the universe, demonstrated that the observed motions of celestial objects can be explained without putting Earth at rest in the center of the universe. His work stimulated further scientific investigations, becoming a landmark in the history of science that is often referred to as the Copernican Revolution. Among the great polymaths of the Renaissance, Copernicus was a mathematician, astronomer, physician, quadrilingual polyglot, classical scholar, translator, artist,[2] Catholic cleric, jurist, governor, military leader, diplomat and economist. Among his many responsibilities, astronomy figured as little more than an avocation — yet it was in that field that he made his mark upon the world.
Life Birthplace on St. Anne's Street (now Copernicus Street), Toruń Nicolaus Copernicus was born on 19 February 1473 in the city of Toruń (Thorn) in Prusy Królewskie (Royal Prussia), a prowincja (Region) of the Kingdom of Poland. His father was a merchant from Kraków and his mother was the daughter of a wealthy Toruń merchant. Nicolaus was the youngest of four children. His brother Andreas became an Augustinian canon at Frombork (Frauenburg). His sister Barbara, named after her mother, became a Benedictine nun. His sister Katharina married Barthel Gertner, a businessman and city councilor. Copernicus never married or had children. Father's familyThe father’s family can be traced to a village in Silesia near Nysa. The name of the village has been variously spelled Kopernik[3], Köppernig, Köppernick, and today Koperniki. In the 14th century, members of the family began moving to various other Silesian cities, to the Polish capital, Kraków (1367), and to Toruń (1400). The father, likely the son of Jan, came from the Kraków line.[4] Nicolaus was named after his father, who appears in records for the first time as a well-to-do Roman Catholic merchant who dealt in copper, selling it mostly in Danzig (Gdańsk).[5][6] He moved from Kraków to Toruń around 1458.[7] Toruń, situated on the Vistula River, was at that time embroiled in the Thirteen Years' War (1454–66), in which the Kingdom of Poland, allied with Pomeranian cities, fought the Teutonic Order over control of the region. The father was actively engaged in the politics of the day, and he supported Poland and the cities against the Teutonic Order.[8] In 1454 he mediated negotiations between Poland’s Cardinal Zbigniew Oleśnicki and the Pomeranian cities over repayment of war loans. In the Second Peace of Thorn (1466), the Teutonic Order formally relinquished all claims to Royal Prussia, which then remained a Region of Poland for the next 300 years. The father married Barbara Watzenrode, the astronomer's mother, between 1461 and 1464. He died sometime between 1483 and 1485. Upon the father’s death, young Nicolaus’ maternal uncle, Lucas Watzenrode the Younger (1447–1512), took the boy under his protection and saw to his education and career. Mother's family Copernicus' uncle, Lucas Watzenrode Nicolaus’ mother, Barbara Watzenrode, was the daughter of Lucas Watzenrode the Elder and his wife Katherine (nee Modlibóg).[9][10][11] Not much is known about her life, but she is believed to have died when Nicolaus was a small boy. The Watzenrodes, who were Roman Catholic, had come from the Świdnica region of Silesia and had settled in Toruń after 1360, becoming prominent members of the city’s patrician class.[12] Through the Watzenrodes' extensive family relationships by marriage, they were related to wealthy families of Toruń, Danzig and Elbląg (Elbing), and to the prominent Czapski, Działyński, Konopacki and Kościelecki noble families.[13] The Modlibógs (literally, in Polish, "Pray to God") were a prominent Roman Catholic Polish family who had been well known in Poland's history since 1271.[14] Lucas and Katherine had three children: Lucas Watzenrode the Younger, who would become Copernicus' patron; Barbara, the astronomer's mother; and Christina, who in 1459 married the merchant and mayor of Toruń, Tiedeman von Allen. Lucas Watzenrode the Elder was well-regarded in Toruń as a devout man and honest merchant, and he was active politically. He was a decided opponent of the Teutonic Knights and an ally of Polish King Kazimierz IV Jagiellon.[15] In 1453 he was the delegate from Toruń at the Grudziądz (Graudenz) conference that planned the Pomeranian cities’ alliance with Kazimierz and their subsequent war against the Teutonic Knights.[16] During the Thirteen Years' War that ensued the following year, he actively supported the war effort with substantial monetary subsidies, with political activity in Toruń and Danzig, and by personally fighting in battles at Łasin and Marienburg.[17] He died in 1462. Lucas Watzenrode the Younger, the astronomer's uncle and patron, was educated at the Kraków Academy (now Jagiellonian University) and at the universities of Cologne and Bologna. He was a bitter opponent of the Teutonic Order[18][19] and its Grand Master, who once referred to Watzenrode as “the devil incarnate.”[20] In 1489 Watzenrode was elected Bishop of Warmia against the wishes of King Kazimierz IV, who had hoped to install his own son in that seat. As a result, Watzenrode quarreled with the King until Kazimierz’s death three years later.[21] Watzenrode was then able to form close relations with three successive Polish monarchs—Jan Olbracht, Alexander Jagiellon, and Zygmunt I. He was a friend and key advisor to each ruler, and his influence greatly strengthened the ties between Warmia and Poland proper.[22][23] Watzenrode came to be considered the most powerful man in Warmia, and his wealth, connections and influence allowed him to secure Copernicus’ education and career as a canon at Frombork (Frauenberg) Cathedral. Languages German-language letter from Copernicus to Duke Albert of Prussia, 1541. Copernicus gives medical advice about the Duke's counselor, George von Kunheim. Copernicus spoke Latin, Polish, and German with equal fluency. He also spoke Greek and Italian.[24][25][26][27] The vast majority of Copernicus’ surviving works are in Latin, which in his lifetime was the universal language of academia. Latin was also the official language of the Roman Catholic Church and of Poland's royal court, and thus all of Copernicus’ correspondence with the Church and with Polish leaders was in Latin. A German-language correspondence between Copernicus and Duke Albert of Prussia has survived. Some German scholars assert that German should be considered Copernicus’ native language[28] because Toruń was predominantly German-speaking,[29] because a German-language correspondence has survived to illustrate his proficiency, and because, while at Bologna in 1496, he signed into the German natio (Natio Germanorum), a student organization for German-speakers of all ethnicities, kingdoms and states.[30][31][32][33][34] Name Coppernicus' signature at election of Bishop Ferber In Copernicus’ time, people were often called after the places where they lived. Like the Silesian village that inspired it, Copernicus’ family name has been spelled variously. Today the world primarily knows the astronomer by the Latinized version "Nicolaus Copernicus." In Poland he is called Mikołaj Kopernik. In Germany, the preferred version is Nikolaus Kopernikus. The name likely had something to do with the local Silesian copper-mining industry,[35] though some Polish scholars assert that it may have been inspired by the dill plant ("kopernik," in Polish) that grows wild in Silesia.[36] As was to be the case with William Shakespeare in England a century later,[37] numerous spelling variants of the name are documented for the astronomer and his relatives. The name first appeared as a place name in Silesia in the 13th century, where it was spelled variously in Latin documents. Copernicus was rather indifferent to orthography.[38] During his childhood, the name of his father (and thus of the future astronomer) was recorded in Toruń as Niclas Koppernigk.[39][40] At Kraków he signed his name "Nicolaus Nicolai de Torunia." [41] At Bologna in 1496, he registered as "Nicolaus Kopperlingk de Thorn." At Padua, Copernicus signed his name "Nicolaus Copernik."[42] He signed a self-portrait, now at Jagiellonian University, "N Copernic."[43] The astronomer Latinized his name to Coppernicus, generally with two "p"s (in 23 of 31 documents studied),[44] but later in life he used a single "p". On the title page of De revolutionibus, Rheticus published the name as (in the genitive, or possessive, case) "Nicolai Copernici." Education Copernicus with medicinal plant Copernicus' uncle seems first to have sent him to the St. John's School at Toruń where he himself had been a master. Later the boy attended the Cathedral School at Włocławek, up the Vistula River from Toruń, which prepared pupils for entrance to the Kraków Academy, in Poland's capital.[45] In 1491 Copernicus enrolled in the Kraków Academy (now Jagiellonian University). It was there that he probably first encountered astronomy with Professor Albert Brudzewski. Astronomy soon fascinated him, and he began collecting a large library on the subject. Copernicus' library would later be carried off as war booty by the Swedes during the Deluge; it is now at the Uppsala University Library. After four years in Kraków, followed by a brief stay back home in Toruń, Copernicus went to study law and medicine at the universities of Bologna and Padua. Copernicus' uncle, Lucas Watzenrode the Younger, financed his education. Copernicus, however, while studying canon and civil law at Bologna, met the famous astronomer, Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara. Copernicus attended Novara's lectures and became his disciple and assistant. Copernicus published his first astronomical observations, made with Novara in 1497, in De revolutionibus. In 1497 Watzenrode was ordained Bishop of Warmia, and Copernicus was named a canon at Frombork Cathedral. But Copernicus remained in Italy, where he attended the Jubilee of 1500. He also went to Rome, where he observed a lunar eclipse and gave lectures in astronomy and mathematics. Copernicus returned to Frombork in 1501. As soon as he arrived, he obtained permission to complete his studies in Padua, where he studied medicine with Guarico and Girolamo Fracastoro, and at Ferrara, where he received a doctorate in canon law in 1503. One of the subjects that Copernicus must have studied was astrology, since it was considered an important part of a medical education.[46] However, unlike most other prominent Renaissance astronomers, he appears never to have practiced or expressed any interest in astrology.[47] WorkIn 1503 Copernicus returned to Warmia, where he would live out the rest of his life. From 1503 to 1510 he was secretary to his uncle, Lucas Watzenrode, and resided in the Bishop's castle at Lidzbark Warmiński (Heilsberg). It is there that he started work on his heliocentric view of the heavens.[48] In 1510 he moved to Frombork, a town to the north, downstream of Toruń, on the Vistula Lagoon. The Prince-Bishopric of Warmia enjoyed substantial autonomy, with its own diet, army, monetary unit (the same as in the other parts of Royal Prussia) and treasury.[49] Some time before his return to Warmia, Copernicus received a sinecure at the Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross in Wrocław (Breslau), Silesia, Bohemia. He would hold this for many years before resigning it for health reasons shortly before his death. During 1516–21, Copernicus resided at Olsztyn Castle as economic administrator of Warmia, including Olsztyn (Allenstein) and Pieniężno (Mehlsack). While there, he wrote a manuscript, Locationes mansorum desertorum (Locations of Deserted Fiefs). When Olsztyn was besieged by the Teutonic Knights during the Polish-Teutonic War (1519–21), Copernicus was in charge of the defenses of Olsztyn and Warmia by the Royal Polish forces. He also participated in the peace negotiations.[50] Copernicus worked for years with the Royal Prussian diet, and with Duke Albert of Prussia (against whom Copernicus had defended Warmia in the Polish-Teutonic War), and advised Poland's King Sigismund I the Old, on monetary reform. He participated in the discussions in the East Prussian diet about coinage reform in the Prussian countries. One question that concerned the diet was who had the right to mint coin. The matter required diplomacy, but was resolved successfully. Some difficulties were caused by political upheavals in Prussia at the time, including the 1525 establishment of the Duchy of Prussia as a Protestant state. In 1526 Copernicus wrote a study on the value of money, Monetae cudendae ratio. In it he formulated an early iteration of the theory, now called Gresham's Law, that "bad" (debased) coinage drives "good" (un-debased) coinage out of circulation—70 years before Thomas Gresham. He also formulated a version of quantity theory of money. Copernicus' recommendations on monetary reform were widely read by leaders of both Prussia and Poland in their attempts to stabilize currency.[51][52] The 1533, Johann Widmanstetter (alternately spelled John Widmanstad), a secretary of Pope Clement VII, explained the Copernican system to the Pope and two cardinals. The Pope was so pleased that he gave Widmanstetter a valuable gift.[53] In 1535 Bernard Wapowski wrote a letter to a gentleman in Vienna, urging him to publish an enclosed almanac, which he claimed had been written by Copernicus. This is the first and only mention of a Copernicus almanac in the historical records. The "almanac" was likely Copernicus' tables of planetary positions. The Wapowski letter mentions Copernicus' theory about the motions of the earth. Nothing came of Wapowski's request, because he died a couple of weeks later.[53] Following the death of Prince-Bishop of Warmia Mauritius Ferber (1 July 1537), Copernicus participated in the election of his successor Johannes Dantiscus (20 September 1537). Copernicus was one of four candidates for the post, written in at the initiative of Tiedemann Giese; but his candidacy was actually pro forma, since Dantiscus had earlier been named coadjutor to the late Ferber.[54] At first Copernicus maintained friendly relations with the new Prince-Bishop, rendering him medical assistance in the spring of 1538 and accompanying him that summer on an inspection tour of Chapter holdings. But that autumn their friendship was disturbed by suspicions over Copernicus' housekeeper Anna Schilling, whom Dantiscus in the spring of 1539 ordered removed from Frombork.[55] Copernicus the physician, in his younger days, had treated his uncle, brother and other Chapter members. In later years he was called upon to attend the elderly bishops who in turn occupied the see of Warmia—Mauritius Ferber, Johannes Dantiscus—and, in 1539, his old friend Tiedemann Giese, Bishop of Chełmno (Kulm). In treating such important patients, he sometimes sought consultations from other physicians, including the physician to Duke Albert of Prussia and, by letter, the Polish Royal Physician.[56] In the spring of 1541, two years before his death, Copernicus was hastily summoned by Duke Albert, the former Grand Master of the Teutonic Order. Copernicus was to go to Königsberg to attend the Duke's counselor George von Kunheim, who had fallen seriously ill, and for whom the Prussian doctors seemed unable to do anything. Copernicus went willingly; he had met von Kunheim during negotiations over reform of the coinage. And Copernicus had come to feel that Albert himself was not such a bad person; the two had many intellectual interests in common. The Chapter readily gave Copernicus permission to go, as it wished to remain on good terms with the Duke, despite his Lutheran faith. In about a month the patient recovered, and Copernicus returned to Frombork. For a time, he continued to receive reports on von Kunheim's condition, and to send him medical advice by letter.[57] Throughout this period in his life, Copernicus continued to make astronomical observations and calculations, but only as his other responsibilities permitted and never in a professional capacity. In 1551, eight years after Copernicus' death, Erasmus Reinhold would publish, under Duke Albert's sponsorship, the Prutenic Tables, a set of astronomical tables based on Copernicus' work. Astronomers and astrologers quickly adopted it in place of its predecessors.[58] Heliocentrism Painting by Matejko Some time before 1514 Copernicus made available to friends his "Commentariolus" ("Little Commentary"), a forty-page manuscript describing his ideas about the heliocentric hypothesis.[59] It contained seven basic assumptions. Thereafter he continued gathering data for a more detailed work. About 1532 Copernicus had basically completed his work on the manuscript of De revolutionibus orbium coelestium; but despite urging by his closest friends, he resisted openly publishing his views, not wishing—as he confessed—to risk the scorn "to which he would expose himself on account of the novelty and incomprehensibility of his theses."[60] In 1533, Johann Albrecht Widmannstetter delivered a series of lectures in Rome outlining Copernicus' theory. Pope Clement VII and several Catholic cardinals heard the lectures and were interested in the theory. On 1 November 1536, Nikolaus Cardinal von Schönberg, Archbishop of Capua, wrote to Copernicus from Rome:
By then Copernicus' work was nearing its definitive form, and rumors about his theory had reached educated people all over Europe. Despite urgings from many quarters, Copernicus delayed publication of his book, perhaps from fear of criticism—a fear delicately expressed in the subsequent dedication of his masterpiece to Pope Paul III. Scholars disagree on whether Copernicus' concern was limited to possible astronomical and philosophical objections, or whether he was also concerned about religious objections.[62] The bookCopernicus was still working on De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (even if not convinced that he wanted to publish it) when in 1539 Georg Joachim Rheticus, a Wittenberg mathematician, arrived in Frombork. Philipp Melanchthon had arranged for Rheticus to visit several astronomers and study with them. Rheticus became Copernicus' pupil, staying with him for two years and writing a book, Narratio prima (First Account), outlining the essence of Copernicus' theory. In 1542 Rheticus published a treatise on trigonometry by Copernicus (later included in the second book of De revolutionibus). Under strong pressure from Rheticus, and having seen the favorable first general reception of his work, Copernicus finally agreed to give De revolutionibus to his close friend, Tiedemann Giese, bishop of Chełmno (Kulm), to be delivered to Rheticus for printing by Johannes Petreius at Nuremberg (Nürnberg). While Rheticus initially supervised the printing, he had to leave Nuremberg before it was completed, and he handed over the task of supervising the rest of the printing to a Lutheran theologian, Andreas Osiander.[63] Osiander added an unauthorised and unsigned preface, defending the work against those who might be offended by the novel hypotheses. He explained that astronomers may find different causes for observed motions, and choose whatever is easier to grasp. As long as a hypothesis allows reliable computation, it does not have to match what a philosopher might seek as the truth. Death Copernicus' Last Moments, by Lesser Copernicus died in Frauenburg (Frombork) on 24 May 1543. Legend has it that the first printed copy of De revolutionibus was placed in his hands on the very day that he died, allowing him to take farewell of his life's work. He is reputed to have awoken from a stroke-induced coma, looked at his book, and then died peacefully. Copernicus was reportedly buried in Frombork Cathedral, where archeologists long searched in vain for his remains. In August 2005, a team led by Jerzy Gąssowski, head of an archaeology and anthropology institute in Pułtusk, after scanning beneath the cathedral floor, discovered what they believe to be Copernicus' remains.[64][65] The find came after a year of searching, and the discovery was announced only after further research, on November 3, 2008.[64] Gąssowski said he was "almost 100 percent sure it is Copernicus." Forensic expert Capt. Dariusz Zajdel of the Central Forensic Laboratory of the Polish Police used the skull to reconstruct a face that closely resembled the features — including a broken nose and a scar above the left eye — on a Copernicus self-portrait.[64][66] The expert also determined that the skull belonged to a man who had died around age 70 — Copernicus' age at the time of his death.[67] The grave was in poor condition, and not all the remains of the skeleton were found; missing, among other things, was the lower jaw.[68] The DNA from the bones found in the grave matched hair samples taken from a book owned by Copernicus which was kept in the library of the University of Uppsala in Sweden.[69][70] In 2005, specialists at the central crime laboratory in Warsaw created a reconstruction of Copernicus' face based on the skull. The BBC website contains a portrait of what Copernicus may have looked like based on this effort.[71] Copernican systemMain article: Copernican heliocentrism PredecessorsPhilolaus (c. 480–385 BCE), a Greek philosopher of the Pythagorean school, described an astronomical system in which the Earth, Moon, Sun, planets, and stars all revolved about a central fire.[72] Heraclides Ponticus (387–312 BCE) proposed that the Earth rotates on its axis.[73] According to Archimedes, Aristarchus of Samos (310–230 BCE) wrote of heliocentric hypotheses in a book that does not survive.[74] Plutarch wrote that Aristarchus was accused of impiety for "putting the Earth in motion".[75] In a manuscript of De revolutionibus, Copernicus wrote, "It is likely that ... Philolaus perceived the mobility of the earth, which also some say was the opinion of Aristarchus of Samos", but later struck out the passage and omitted it from the published book.[76] PtolemyMain article: Almagest The prevailing theory in Europe during Copernicus' lifetime was the one that the Greek astronomer Ptolemy published in his Almagest circa 150 CE. Ptolemy's system drew on previous Greek theories in which the Earth was the stationary center of the universe. Stars were embedded in a large outer sphere which rotated rapidly, approximately daily, while each of the planets, the Sun, and the Moon were embedded in their own, smaller spheres. Ptolemy's system employed devices, including epicycles, deferents and equants, to account for observations that the paths of these bodies differed from simple, circular orbits centered on the Earth. Copernicus Mid-16th-century portrait of Copernicus[77] Copernicus' major theory was published in De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres), in the year of his death, 1543, though he had formulated the theory several decades earlier. Copernicus' "Commentariolus" summarized his heliocentric theory. It listed the "assumptions" upon which the theory was based as follows:[78]
De revolutionibus itself was divided into six parts, called "books":
SuccessorsGeorg Joachim Rheticus could have been Copernicus' successor, but did not rise to the occasion.[53] Erasmus Reinhold could have been his successor, but died prematurely.[53] The first of the great successors was Tycho Brahe,[53] followed by his erstwhile co-worker, Johannes Kepler.[53] CopernicanismAt original publication, Copernicus' epoch-making book caused only mild controversy, and provoked no fierce sermons about contradicting Holy Scripture. It was only three years later, in 1546, that a Dominican, Giovanni Maria Tolosani, denounced the theory in an appendix to a work defending the absolute truth of Scripture.[79] He also noted that the Master of the Sacred Palace (i.e., the Catholic Church's chief censor), Bartolomeo Spina, a friend and fellow Dominican, had planned to condemn De revolutionibus but had been prevented from doing so by his illness and death.[80] Arthur Koestler, in his popular book The Sleepwalkers, asserted that Copernicus' book had not been widely read on its first publication.[81] This claim was trenchantly criticised by Edward Rosen,[82] and has been decisively disproved by Owen Gingerich, who examined every surviving copy of the first two editions and found copious marginal notes by their owners throughout many of them. Gingerich published his conclusions in 2004 in The Book Nobody Read.[83] It has been much debated why it was not until six decades after Spina and Tolosani's attacks on Copernicus's work that the Catholic Church took any official action against it. Proposed reasons have included the personality of Galileo Galilei and the availability of evidence such as telescope observations. In March 1616, in connection with the Galileo affair, the Roman Catholic Church's Congregation of the Index issued a decree suspending De revolutionibus until it could be "corrected," on the grounds that the supposedly Pythagorean doctrine[84] that the Earth moves and the Sun does not was "false and altogether opposed to Holy Scripture."[85] The same decree also prohibited any work that defended the mobility of the Earth or the immobility of the Sun, or that attempted to reconcile these assertions with Scripture. On the orders of Pope Paul V, Cardinal Robert Bellarmine gave Galileo prior notice that the decree was about to be issued, and warned him that he could not "hold or defend" the Copernican doctrine.[86] The corrections to De revolutionibus, which omitted or altered nine sentences, were issued four years later, in 1620.[87] In 1633 Galileo Galilei was convicted of grave suspicion of heresy for "following the position of Copernicus, which is contrary to the true sense and authority of Holy Scripture,"[88] and was placed under house arrest for the rest of his life. The Catholic Church's 1758 Index of Prohibited Books omitted the general prohibition of works defending heliocentrism,[89] but retained the specific prohibitions of the original uncensored versions of De revolutionibus and Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. Those prohibitions were finally dropped from the 1835 Index.[90] NationalityNationality did not yet play as important a role in Copernicus' time as it would later, and people generally did not think of themselves primarily as Polish or German.[91] His father's family has been described as Polish, and his mother's family as of German origin.[29] Encyclopædia Britannica,[92] Encyclopedia Americana,[93] The Columbia Encyclopedia,[94] The Oxford World Encyclopedia,[95] and the Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia[96] identify Copernicus as Polish. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy states: "Thus the child of a German family was a subject of the Polish crown."[97] CoperniciumOn July 14, 2009, the discoverers, from the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt, Germany of chemical element 112 (temporarily named ununbium) proposed to the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry that its permanent name be "copernicium" (symbol Cn) "to honor an outstanding scientist who changed our view of the world".[98] See also
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Categories: 16th-century astronomers | 16th-century Latin writers | 16th-century mathematicians | Alumni of Jagiellonian University | University of Padua alumni | University of Bologna alumni | University of Ferrara alumni | History of astronomy | Renaissance people | Astronomers from Royal Prussia | People from Royal Prussia | People from Toruń | German astronomers | German philosophers | German economists | Polish astronomers | Polish philosophers | Polish economists | Religion and science | Roman Catholic scientist-clerics | Walhalla enshrinees | Canons of Warmia | Burials at Frombork Cathedral | 1473 births | 1543 deaths | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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