The Niels Bohr Archive's
History of Science Seminar
Thursday 1 March 2007 at 14:15
Auditorium M, Niels Bohr Institute
Blegdamsvej 17, Copenhagen

John Heilbron
Professor of History, Emeritus
University of California, Berkeley

History, astronomy, and
international politics in late baroque Rome:
The several lives of
Monsignore Francesco Bianchini (1662-1729)

In 1702, on orders from Pope Clement XI, Bianchini installed a solar observatory in the basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Rome for scientific as well as political purposes. Clement later appointed him superintendent of all Latin inscriptions found in Rome and secret agent in the cause of James III, the Catholic Stuart pretender to the throne of England. The latter commission took him to England, where Newton and other anti-Catholics gave him a surprisingly cordial welcome. Before building the solar observatory, Bianchini had published a "universal history" of humankind during the first thirty-two centuries of its existence. He continued to write history, mainly on paper and about the early church; but he also used the pavement of Santa Maria degli Angeli to inscribe, in places fixed astronomically, important events in Clement's relations with James. The lecturer will attempt to link Bianchini's historical and astronomical work, his welcome by Newton, and his service to the Jacobite cause.


NBA Home