Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published May 2015 | public
Journal Article

Simon Marius's Mundus Iovialis: 400th Anniversary in Galileo's Shadow

Abstract

Simon Marius, Court Astronomer in Ansbach in Germany, independently discovered the moons of Jupiter one day after Galileo's widely accepted discovery on 7 January 1610. Because Marius was using the Julian calendar (so-called O.S., Old Style), his discovery was made in 1609, though adding the 10 days of difference to transform, to the Gregorian calendar (so-called N.S., New Style) that Galileo was using, his notes of his discovery give 8 January 1610 (N.S.). Further, though Galileo famously published his Sidereus Nuncius in March 1610, Marius did not publish his discovery of four moons circling Jupiter until 1611, in a locally circulated almanac. He then published this work in a major book, Mundus Iovialis, though not until 1614. Galileo, who was forceful in asserting his priority, accused Marius of plagiarism in Il Saggiatore (1623), and Marius's reputation was ruined for hundreds of years. Only in the early 1900s did a jury in the Netherlands assess the discovery claims and vindicate Marius, though Marius deserves more credit and recognition with the general public than he currently has. Still, the current names we use for the four major moons of Jupiter—Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto—come from Marius's book, of which approximately 30 copies from 1610 survive. Marius's 1614 frontispiece, and his earlier almanac, show the four satellites in orbits, in contrast to Galileo's use of asterisks and the letter O, so arguably Marius provided the first images of the orbits of what we call the Galilean satellites and what Galileo himself called first the Cosmean stars (Cosmica Sidera) and finally, in print, the Medicean stars (Medicea Sidera).

Additional Information

© 2015 The Author(s). I thank Pierre Leich of the Nürnberger Astronomische Gesellschaft for his collaboration and for the information and translations that he has supplied. I thank Seth Fagen, now of PRPH Books in New York, for convincing me 18 years ago to buy a copy of Marius's 1614 book, at that time with the main point that the frontispiece provided the first image of an astronomical telescope. I thank the Division III Funding Committee of Williams College for partial support, and Prof. Andrew Ingersoll and the Planetary Sciences Department of Caltech for hospitality and Visitor status. I thank Wayne Hammond, Assistant Librarian of the Chapin Library of Williams College, for bibliographic and photographic assistance on this project and with my collection. I am grateful to Robert Littman of the Department of Classics of the University of Hawaii for consultations on translations, and Joseph Gangestad of Aerospace Corp. for his comments on an early draft.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023