Nicolaus Copernicus Monument, Toruń

Coordinates: 53°00′37″N 18°36′18″E / 53.01028°N 18.60500°E / 53.01028; 18.60500
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Monument to Copernicus, inscribed: "Nicolaus Copernicus Thorunensis, terrae motor, solis caelique stator"

The Nicolaus Copernicus Monument in the home town of astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543) was erected in 1853 by a "monument committee" of the city's residents.

Original plans

King Frederick the Great of Prussia (1712–1786) intended[1] to erect a monument at Copernicus' grave in Frauenburg (Frombork), but the grave could not be located.

Astronomer

monument designed by Bertel Thorvaldsen was completed in 1830.[4]

After the Napoleonic Wars, Thorn was made part of the Kingdom of Prussia, and local German citizens campaigned for and received the go-ahead for the monument that was eventually completed in that city in 1853.[3]

Funding and building

Copernicus
"

On 19 February 1839, the astronomer's birthday, a committee of twelve citizens was founded to promote a monument. In May 1839 King Frederick William III of Prussia approved the collection of donations, but he died soon afterward, and it was Frederick William IV who donated the largest share of the money, 3,466 Prussian thalers. The total cost was 10,449 thalers,[5] almost half of which was for the casting in bronze by Fischer in Berlin. The clay model was the last work of Christian Friedrich Tieck (1776–1851).[5]

The statue, twice-life-size on a 16-foot pedestal, was in 1856 considered one of only eight monuments to Copernicus.[6] Having fulfilled its task, the committee continued its activities as a society called Coppernicus-Verein für Wissenschaft und Kunst zu Thorn (Copernicus Association for Science and Art in Thorn). For many years the Association was headed by Leopold Prowe.

Monument

The monument presents Copernicus in

water well
.

The pedestal bears a Latin inscription drawn up by Alexander von Humboldt:[5][7] "Nicolaus Copernicus Thorunensis, terrae motor, solis caelique stator" ("Nicolaus Copernicus of Thorun, mover of the earth, stopper of the sun and heavens").[3]

Renovations

In 2003, on the 150th anniversary of its construction, the monument was renovated. As part of the renovations, the stone

Marshal of the Sejm of the Republic of Poland, Marek Borowski.[3]

Gallery

  • Close-up
    Close-up

See also

  • Nicolaus Copernicus
  • Nicolaus Copernicus Monument in Kraków
  • Nicolaus Copernicus Monument in Warsaw

Notes

  1. ^ "... beabsichtigte Friedrich der Grosse über dem Grabe von Coppernicus zu Frauenburg ein Denkmal zu errichten." – Leopold Prowe, Nicolaus Coppernicus, volume 1, part 1, Wiedmannsche Buchhandlung, 1883 [1]
  2. ^ „Nicht selten wird Kopernikus für einen Polen ausgegeben und diese Ansicht ist gewissermassen legalisirt worden, seit ihm zu Warschau ein Standbild errichtet ist mit der Inschrift Nicolao Copernico grata patria. Allein dieses Denkmal liess 1809 Napoleon bei Thorwaldsen bestellen, und zwar ursprünglich für Thorn, es kam aber erst und nicht ohne Kämpfe mit den russischen Behörden 1829 in Warschau zur Aufstellung.“ – Johann Christian Poggendorff: Geschichte der Physik, 1879 Seite 138
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Pomnik Mikołaja Kopernika" ("Monument to Nicolaus Copernicus"), Official Website of the City of Toruń [2]
  4. ^ a b c Leopold Prowe, "Nicolaus Copernicus und die Aufstellung seiner Statue in Thorn," Neue preußische Provinzial-Blätter, Band IV, Theile, 1853 p. 448
  5. ^ Ueber das Bestehen und Wirken des Naturforschenden Gesellschaft zu Bamberg, volumes 3–4, J.M. Reindl, 1856 [3]
  6. ^ "A monument to Copernicus has been erected at Thorn in Prussia, his native place. It bears the inscription drawn up by Baron Humboldt — Nicolaus Copernicus, Torunensis, terrae motor, solis caelique stator, on one side, and on the other, Natus anno 1473, obiit anno 1543." — F. Jefferies, The Gentleman's Magazine, volume XL, 1853 171 The Gentleman's magazine at Google Books

53°00′37″N 18°36′18″E / 53.01028°N 18.60500°E / 53.01028; 18.60500