APPC

Mar 22
towerofsleep:

nogold:

TYCHO BRAHE»»»»
‘Tycho was said to own one percent of the entire wealth of Denmark at one point in the 1580s and he often held large social gatherings in his castle. He kept a dwarf named Jepp (whom Tycho believed to be clairvoyant) as a court jester who sat under the table during dinner. Pierre Gassendi wrote that Tycho also had a tame elk, and that his mentor the Landgrave Wilhelm of Hesse-Kassel (Hesse-Cassel) asked whether there was an animal faster than a deer. Tycho replied, writing that there was none, but he could send his tame elk. When Wilhelm replied he would accept one in exchange for a horse, Tycho replied with the sad news that the elk had just died on a visit to entertain a nobleman at Landskrona. Apparently during dinner the elk had drunk a lot of beer, fallen down the stairs, and died.’

And let’s not forget that he was one of the foremost astronomers of his day. He combined the Copernican and Ptolemaic systems, producing innovations that Johannes Kepler (who was his assistant) used to generate the next phase in astronomical science.

Put a tuque on him.

towerofsleep:

nogold:

TYCHO BRAHE»»»»

‘Tycho was said to own one percent of the entire wealth of Denmark at one point in the 1580s and he often held large social gatherings in his castle. He kept a dwarf named Jepp (whom Tycho believed to be clairvoyant) as a court jester who sat under the table during dinner. Pierre Gassendi wrote that Tycho also had a tame elk, and that his mentor the Landgrave Wilhelm of Hesse-Kassel (Hesse-Cassel) asked whether there was an animal faster than a deer. Tycho replied, writing that there was none, but he could send his tame elk. When Wilhelm replied he would accept one in exchange for a horse, Tycho replied with the sad news that the elk had just died on a visit to entertain a nobleman at Landskrona. Apparently during dinner the elk had drunk a lot of beer, fallen down the stairs, and died.’

And let’s not forget that he was one of the foremost astronomers of his day. He combined the Copernican and Ptolemaic systems, producing innovations that Johannes Kepler (who was his assistant) used to generate the next phase in astronomical science.

Put a tuque on him.