Poster Of Monte Guidobaldo del Monte. lived from 1545 to 1607. Guidobaldo del Montewrote on Statics and also on astronomy. Find out more at http http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Posters2/Monte.html
IMSS - Multimedia Catalogue - Biography Guidobaldo Del MONTE Guidobaldo del MONTE. Pesaro 1545 1607. Monte studied mathematics at the University of Padua and then between 1572 and 1575 he was a pupil of Commandino in Urbino. http://galileo.imss.firenze.it/museo/b/emonteg.html
Monte guidobaldo Marchese del monte. Born 11 Jan 1545 in Pesaro, Italy. Died 6 Jan 1607 in montebaroccio, Italy. guidobaldo del monte studied at the University of Padua. After this he studied in Urbino. http://homepages.compuserve.de/thweidenfeller/mathematiker/Monte.htm
Extractions: Died: 6 Jan 1607 in Montebaroccio, Italy Guidobaldo del Monte studied at the University of Padua. After this he studied in Urbino. He had no need to work as he inherited the family estate of Montebaroccio when his father died as well as the title Marchese del Monte. His father had been made Marchese del Monte by Duke Guidobaldo II of Urbino. For a while Guidobaldo served in the army during the war against the Ottoman in Hungary. The Ottomans had occupied and annexed Hungary in 1541 which resulted in almost continuous conflict over many years. After serving in the army, Guidobaldo returned to his estate where he was able to spend his time doing research into mathematics, mechanics, astronomy and optics. Guidobaldo's book Liber mechanicorum (1577) was regarded as the greatest work on statics since Greek times. It was a return to classical Greek rigour deliberately rejecting the approach of Jordanus , >Tartaglia and Cardan . His approach was adopted by Galileo who was Guidobaldo's friend for 20 years.
DISEÑOS DE MAQUINAS ANTERIORES A LA REVOLUCION INDUSTRIAL filosófica de las funciones de las artes mecánicas, del modo de conocer unido a la experimentación y a Galileo Galilei y guidobaldo del monte establecen las bases de la mecánica http://www.unicas.it/ingegneria/cigola/Articoli/macch_sp.htm
Monte dal rather than del as was fairly common at the time) so it is not unusual tosee him referred to as guidobaldo dal monte rather than guidobaldo del monte. http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Monte.html
Extractions: Guidobaldo del Monte 's father, Ranieri, was from a leading wealthy family in Urbino. Ranieri was noted for his role as a soldier and also as the author of two books on military architecture. The Duke of Urbino, Duke Guidobaldo II, honoured him with the title Marchese del Monte so the family had only become a noble one in the generation before Guidobaldo. On the death of his father Guidobaldo inherited the title of Marchese. We should notice at this point that he signed himself Guidobaldo dal Monte (using 'dal' rather than 'del' as was fairly common at the time) so it is not unusual to see him referred to as Guidobaldo dal Monte rather than Guidobaldo del Monte. For convenience, however, we will refer to him as Guidobaldo throughout this article, although in other places in this archive we refer to him as del Monte. We should also note that a title was not the only thing which he inherited on his father's death for he also came heir to the family estate of Montebaroccio. He was then sufficiently wealthy that he had no need to accept paid employment, and even his army service appears to have been unpaid. In fact he could afford to give financial support to other scientists, for example
Monte, Guidobaldo Del [from The Latinized Version, Sometimes Catalog of the Scientific Community. monte, guidobaldo del from the Latinized version, sometimes Favaro, "Galileo e guidobaldo del monte " Atti della R http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/Catalog/Files/monte.html
Extractions: Monte, Guidobaldo del [from the Latinized version, sometimes Note: the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical questions. 1. Dates Born: Pesaro, 11 Jan 1545 Died: Montebaroccio (near Pesaro and Urbino), 6 Jan. 1607 Dateinfo: Dates Certain Lifespan: 2. Father Occupation: Aristocrat, Soldier His father, Ranieri, was created the Marchese del Monte, the title Guidobaldo inherited, by Duke Guidobaldo II of Urbino. The father was a noted soldier and author of two books on military architecture. Guidobaldo inherited an estate on which he was able to live; the family had to have been at least affluent. 3. Nationality Birth: Italian Career: Italian Death: Italian 4. Education Schooling: Padua He studied at Padua, where, inter alia, he was a friend of Tasso. There is no mention of a degree, which would have been irrelevant to him. He also studied mathematics under Commandino in Urbino. 5. Religion Affiliation: Catholic 6. Scientific Disciplines Primary: Mechanics, Mathematics, Astronomy
Monte Biography of guidobaldo del monte (15451607) guidobaldo del monte's father, Ranieri, was from a leading wealthy family in Urbino referred to as guidobaldo dal monte rather than guidobaldo del monte. For convenience, however http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Monte.html
Extractions: Guidobaldo del Monte 's father, Ranieri, was from a leading wealthy family in Urbino. Ranieri was noted for his role as a soldier and also as the author of two books on military architecture. The Duke of Urbino, Duke Guidobaldo II, honoured him with the title Marchese del Monte so the family had only become a noble one in the generation before Guidobaldo. On the death of his father Guidobaldo inherited the title of Marchese. We should notice at this point that he signed himself Guidobaldo dal Monte (using 'dal' rather than 'del' as was fairly common at the time) so it is not unusual to see him referred to as Guidobaldo dal Monte rather than Guidobaldo del Monte. For convenience, however, we will refer to him as Guidobaldo throughout this article, although in other places in this archive we refer to him as del Monte. We should also note that a title was not the only thing which he inherited on his father's death for he also came heir to the family estate of Montebaroccio. He was then sufficiently wealthy that he had no need to accept paid employment, and even his army service appears to have been unpaid. In fact he could afford to give financial support to other scientists, for example
Biography-center - Letter M hu/~arthp/bio/m/montanez/biograph.html. monte, guidobaldo del. wwwhistory.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/ Mathematicians/monte.html. monteggia, Giovanni Battista http://www.biography-center.com/m.html
Extractions: random biography ! Any language Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish 791 biographies
The Galileo Project monte, guidobaldo del from the Latinized version, sometimes 1. Dates BornPesaro, 11 Jan 1545 Died montebaroccio (near Pesaro and Urbino), 6 Jan. http://galileo.rice.edu/Catalog/NewFiles/monte.html
Extractions: Monte, Guidobaldo del [from the Latinized version, sometimes 1. Dates Born: Pesaro, 11 Jan 1545 Died: Montebaroccio (near Pesaro and Urbino), 6 Jan. 1607 Dateinfo: Dates Certain Lifespan: 2. Father Occupation: Aristocrat, Soldier His father, Ranieri, was created the Marchese del Monte, the title Guidobaldo inherited, by Duke Guidobaldo II of Urbino. The father was a noted soldier and author of two books on military architecture. Guidobaldo inherited an estate on which he was able to live; the family had to have been at least affluent. 3. Nationality Birth: Italian Career: Italian Death: Italian 4. Education Schooling: Padua He studied at Padua, where, inter alia, he was a friend of Tasso. There is no mention of a degree, which would have been irrelevant to him. He also studied mathematics under Commandino in Urbino. 5. Religion Affiliation: Catholic 6. Scientific Disciplines Primary: Mechanics, Mathematics, Astronomy Subordinate: Optics Liber mechanicorum, 1577on statics, with a return to pure Archimedean principles in rejection of the quasi- dynamic analysis of Jordanus. Later, Paraphrase of Archimedes: Equilibrium of Planes, 1588, and De cochlea, 1615 (posthumous). Guidobaldo left three manuscript treatises on proportions and on Euclid.
Untitled Machiines and Noble Mechanics guidobaldo del monte and the Translation of Knowledge Three years after guidobaldo del monte, machese of montebaroccio, published his Mechanicorum http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/Isis/abstracts/912hen.html
Extractions: Working Machiines and Noble Mechanics: Guidobaldo del Monte and the Translation of Knowledge By M. Henninger-Voss* Three years after Guidobaldo del Monte, machese of Montebaroccio, published his Mechanicorum liber (1577), the Count Giulio Savorgnano, a military engineer and general of Venetian artillary, had the work translated into Italian. An analysis of the process of this literal translation under the auspices of an engineer reveals a series of intellectual and material translations through which mechanics became a powerful, paradigmatic sciencetranslations between ancient and contemporary knowledge, between geometrical and physical demonstration, between elite and practical learning, and between philisophy and political economy. For Guidobaldo, each of these transformations both depended on and defined how the texts of mechanics were positioned in relation to the everyday practices and temporal goals of mechanical work. This study centers on Guibaldo's articulation of mechanics from his perspective as a nobleman in the duchy of Urbino and examines his use of social, mathmatical, and philisophical authority in his own authorship of mechanical science.
The Galileo Project 8. Patronage Types Scientist, Aristrocrat, Eccesiastic Official, Court Official,City Magistrate 1588, guidobaldo del monte supported his application to the http://galileo.rice.edu/Catalog/NewFiles/galilei_gal.html
Extractions: Galilei, Galileo 1. Dates Born: Pisa, 15 February 1564 Died: Arcetri, immediately outside of Florence, 8 January 1642 Dateinfo: Dates Certain Lifespan: 2. Father Occupation: Musician, Merchant Vincenzio Galilei was descended from a Florentine patrician family. He himself was a distinguished musician. He was not an economic success. He died leaving his oldest son (Galileo) with heavy financial responsibilities but no assets. Financial stringency forced the father into commerce and made him move to Pisa, where Galileo was born. Everything is relative. I cannot see that Galileo grew up impoverished for all the talk of his father's lack of success. I list the financial position as unknown. 3. Nationality Birth: Italian Career: Italian Death: Italian 4. Education Schooling: Pisa As a boy he was tutored in Pisa. The family returned to Florence about 1575, and Galileo went to the school of the monastery at Vallombrosa. He entered the order as a novice in 1578, but did not pursue the clerical life. He enrolled in Pisa in 1581 as a medical student, but left without a degree. Galileo was attracted to mathematics and studied it under Ostillio Ricci in 1583. After he left Pisa, he studied mathematics privately.
Extractions: W. P. Watson Antiquarian Books The Universal Planisphere MONTE, Guidobaldo, Marchese del. Planisphaeriorum universalium theorica. Pesaro, Girolamo Concordia, 1579 4to (261 x 190 mm), pp [vii] 128 [3 including terminal blank leaf] with woodcut of a planisphere on title and numerous fine diagrams and a few illustrations in the text; title slightly darkened, occasional browning or spotting elswhere, a very good copy in eighteenth-century carta rustica, slightly soiled, book label of the Libreria Bellisomi on verso of title (upper cover inscribed 'Dupl.'), in a morocco backed box. £7000 First edition of this treatise on the planisphere by one of the most prominent figures in the renaissance of the mathematical sciences, 'Galileo's patron and friend for twenty years and... possibly the greatest single influence on the mechanics of Galileo' (DSB). Dealing with spherical trigonometry on a two-dimensional surface, this book is in two parts. In the first, Monte discusses the planisphere of Gemma Frisius, and at the end gives intructions for its construction (with diagrams). He demonstrates also how the celestial sphere can be projected onto a plane. The second part considers the plansiphere of Juan de Rojas (the inventor of the universal astrolabe), which Gemma Frisius described as a sort of perspective, with the viewer at an infinite distance.
Ask Jeeves For Kids! R emond, Pierre. monte, guidobaldo del. Moivre, Abraham de http://www.ajkids.com/kidsaskjeeves.asp?ask=Galileo&qSource=0&origin=0&a
Extractions: Librairie Thomas-Scheler MONTE, Guidobaldo Marchese del; Mechanicorum liber. Pisauri Apud Hieronymum Concordiam 1577 In-folio de 8 ff.n.ch. dont un blanc, 130 ff.ch. et 1 f.n.ch. ; vélin de l'époque. Riccardi, I.2, 178-79. Edition originale. C'est le premier ouvrage de Monte, célèbre physicien d'Urbino, qui fut inspecteur des fortifications de Toscane. Il fut considéré by contemporaries as the greatest work on statics since the Greeks. It was intended as a return to classical Archimedean models of rigorous mathematical proof and as a rejection of the barbaric medieval proofs of Jordanus de Nemore (revived by Tartaglia in his Questi of 1546), which mixed dynamic principles with mathematical analysis (DSB). Le volume est illustré de nombreuses figures dans le texte. Bel exemplaire, une mouillure claire dans la marge inférieure. Ex-libris Bibliotheca Mechanica. This item is listed on Bibliopoly by Librairie Thomas-Scheler ; click here for further details.
Perseus Vocabulary Tool Girolamo Borro, Dialogo del flusso e reflusso del mare d'Alseforo Talascopio Gregorio Morelli, Scala di tutte le scienze et arti. guidobaldo del monte, Le Mechaniche http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/vocab?lang=it&collection=Perseus:collec
Biografie - Guidobaldo Del Monte Translate this page guidobaldo del monte Pesaro 1545 Pesaro 1607. Studiò a Pavia eda Urbino, dove fu allievo di Commandino. Nel 1588 venne nominato http://galileo.imss.firenze.it/milleanni/cronologia/biografie/delmonte.html
Nuncius - 2003 Translate this page F. CAMEROTA, Two new attributions a refractive dial of guidobaldo del monte andthe «Roverino compass» of Fabrizio Mordente In questo articolo si propongono http://galileo.imss.firenze.it/pubblic/i2003.html
Extractions: Il presente saggio suggerisce una nuova interpretazione della biologia lamarckiana basata su un'analisi delle diverse immagini sul vivente fra Sette e Ottocento. In particolare, la nouvelle chimie nouvelle chimie inaugurò una nuova epoca cambiando l'organizzazione della cosiddetta "macchina animata": il corpo vivente diventò un naturale composto costantemente soggetto a trasformazioni materiali. Grazie alla
PDF Downloads Translate this page page images text monte, guidobaldo del In Duos Archimedis Aequeponderatium librosparaphrasis 1588. page images text monte, guidobaldo del Le Mechaniche 1581. http://archimedes.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/docuserver/images/archimedes/info/pdf.html
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