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Schott, Gaspar
- 1. Dates
- Born: Koenigshofen, near Wuerzburg, Germany, 5 Feb. 1608
- Died: Wuerzburg, Germany, 22 May 1666 (If it matters, Sommervogel
puts his death in Augsburg.)
- Dateinfo: Dates Certain
- Lifespan: 58
- 2. Father
- Occupation: Unknown
- No information on financial status.
- 3. Nationality
- Birth: Koenigshofen, near Wuerzburg, Germany
- Career: Sicily (i.e., Italy), Germany
- Death: Wuerzburg, Germany
- 4. Education
- Schooling: W?zburg; Religous Order, D.D.
- 1627, entered the Society of Jesus and was sent to the University of
Wuerzburg, where he studied philosophy under Athanasius Kircher. (I’ll leave
this in, but I suspect, especially from the presence of Kircher, that Schott
was in a Jesuit college there.) The Swedish invasion (1631) forced teacher
and students to flee. Schott may have accompanied Kircher to France at first.
- He completed his studies in theology, philosophy, and mathematics at
Palermo. I am convinced that Schott studied at the Jesuit college there, not
in the university. I assume a B.A. or its equivalent. As an ordained Jesuit
professed of the fourth vow, he would have had a doctorate in theology.
- 5. Religion
- Affiliation: Catholic
- He joined the Jesuit order in 1627.
- 6. Scientific Disciplines
- Primary: Physics, Mathematics, Natural Philosophy
- His books were largely compendia of reports he received or books he read.
He did repeat experiments, but is said to have done no original research.
- 7. Means of Support
- Primary: Church Life
- He remained in Palermo for twenty years, mostly teaching in the Jesuit
school at Palermo, although he spent two years in Trapani.
- 1652-5, he was sent to Rome for three years to collaborate with Kircher
on his research.
- 1655-66: He returned to Germany. He went first to Mainz, then to
Wuerzberg, where he taught mathematics and natural philosophy. I am convinced
that he taught always in Jesuit colleges.
- He visited Rome in 1661 and applied for a post to teach mathematics
there, but was instead offered the position of head of the Jesuit college at
Heiligenstadt, which he declined.
- 8. Patronage
- Types: Scientist, Eccesiastic Official, Aristrocrat, Court
Official
- He always revered Kircher as his master. Presumably Kircher was involved
in summoning Schott to Rome in 1652. Someone always stood behind an academic
appointment, even within the Jesuit order; I assume here that it was Kircher.
Schott dedicated part of his Magia universalis (1658-9) to Kircher. He
dedicated the work as a whole to the Bishop of Bamberg.
- Schott dedicated his Technica curiosa (1664) to the Elector of Mainz (who
was the Archbishop).
- He dedicated his Thaumaturgus physicus, 1659, to the Archduke (I don’t
know of what) Charles Joseph.
- He dedicated Cursus mathematicus, 1661, to Leopold I.
- He dedicated Physicua curiosa, 1662, to the Elector Charles Leopold (of
Mainz, I think).
- He dedicated Schola Steganographica, 1666, to Ferdinand Maximilian of
Baden.
- 9. Technological Involvement
- Types: Mechanical Devices, Instruments
- Schott is most widely known for his works on hydraulic and mechanical
instruments. A treatise on ‘chronometric marvels’ contains the first
description of a universal joint and the classification of gear teeth.
- He developed a leveling instrument for use in surveying.
- 10. Scientific Societies
- Memberships: None
- As a result of his compendium, Mechanica hydraulico- pneumatica, he
became the center of a network of correspondence from other Jesuits as well
as lay experimenters. He received letters from Guericke and Huygens, and was
the first to make Boyle’s work on the airpump widely known in Germany.
- Sources
- Edmond R. Kiely, Surveying Instruments, (New York, 1947), p. 131.
- G. Duhr, Geschichte der Jesuiten in der Laendern deutscher Zunge, 3,
(Munich-Regensburg, 1921), 589-92.
- A. de Backer, Bibliotheque des ecrivans de la Compagnie de Jesus, K.
Sommervogel, ed., 7, (Paris, 1896), 904-12.
- Compiled by:
- Richard S. Westfall
- Department of History and Philosophy of Science
- Indiana University