Giuseppe Piazzi (1746 - 1826)
Giuseppe Piazzi
Giuseppe Piazzi was an Italian astronomer, mathematician and priest.
Around 1764 Piazzi became a Theatine priest, in 1779 he was appointed professor of theology in Rome, and in 1780 - professor of higher mathematics at the Academy of Palermo. Later, with the assistance of the Viceroy of Sicily, he founded an observatory in Palermo. There he compiled his great catalog of the positions of 7,646 stars and showed that most stars move relative to the Sun. There, on January 1, 1801, Piazzi also discovered the asteroid Ceres.
Giuseppe Piazzi's merits were appreciated: he was a member of the Royal Society of London, a foreign honorary member of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences and a foreign member of the Paris Academy of Sciences. A crater on the Moon is named in his honor.
Date and place of birt: | 16 july 1746, Ponte in Valtellina, Italy |
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Date and place of death: | 22 july 1826, Naples, Italy |
Period of activity: | XVIII, XIX century |
Specialization: | Astronomer, Educator, Mathematician, Priest, Scientist, Theologian |