Timeline of Galileo Galilei
February 15, 1564
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Galileo is born to Vencenzo Galilei, a musician.
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1574
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Galileo's family moves to Florence, and he starts to attend the monastery of Vallombrosa.
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1581
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1584
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Galileo, fascinated by mathematics and geometry, starts taking classes from Ostilio Ricci, a teacher in the Tuscan court.
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1585
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Galileo, not completing his degree, is forced to leave the University because of lack of funds. He returns to Pisa.
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1586
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He publishes an essay on the hydrostatic balance, a device to measure the mass of objects.
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1589
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He publishes a paper on the center of gravity in solids and is awarded a position as lecturer at the University of Pisa.
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1589-1592
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Galileo works on his theory of motion. Aristotle had said that bodies of different weights fall at different rates, but Galileo did not believe this.
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1592
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Galileo applies and is awarded the chair of mathematics at the University of Padua, where he remained until 1610. Padua is where Galileo did the majority of his work.
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1604
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Galileo publishes his theories, now called the theory of uniform acceleration. He proved that all bodies, regardless of their weight, fall at an equal rate, in the absence of friction. Also in this paper he stated that a ball thrown in the air follows a parabolic path.
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1597
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Galileo writes a letter to Johannes Kepler supporting his heliocentric universe theory over that of Aristotle. Galileo would have published, but he was afraid of ridicule.
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1609
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1609-1610
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Galileo makes many different observations about the solar system, using his new telescope.
He publishes the results in the 1610 book, "Sidereus Nuncius." ("The Starry Messenger")
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1610
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He leaves his position at Padua to become the first philosopher and mathematician to the grand duke of Tuscany. The Duke allowed Galileo more time to work on his projects.
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1611
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He visits Rome to demonstrate the telescope.
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1613
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After being so warmly accepted at Rome, Galileo writes three letters to formally take his position on the heliocentric theory of the universe. His main reason for believing Kepler and Copernicus were his observations of sunspots moving around the sun.
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1613-1616
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Rome and Galileo spend three long years in conflict. Because Galileo choose to write his 1613 letters in Italian, they enjoyed a larger audience than the religious and scientific communities. The Aristotelian Scholars saw the attacks on Aristotelian Philosophy to be attacks upon themselves. The Aristotelian Scholars united against Galileo. The Church, swayed by the Aristotelian Scholars declared that Galileo was contradicting scripture,
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March 5, 1616
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The Catholic Church formally declares the writings of Galileo banned, and warns Galileo not to "hold or defend his doctrines."
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1616-1623
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He retires to his home in Bellosguardo near Florence.
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1623
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Galileo writes his "Assayer..." in which he debates the difference between primary properties, (measurable, quantative) and other properties (smell) and writes his famous quote, "The Book of Nature is written with Mathematical characters."
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1624
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He again travels to Rome hoping to appeal the 1616 decree. The Pope does not repeal the decree, but he does allow Galileo to write on both sides of the issue, noncomentally, and equally supportive of both sides of the issue, and without making any definite conclusions.
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1632
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1632-1633
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Simply put, all hell brakes loose in Galileo's world. The Pope, infuriated at the content of "Dialogo," places him on trial for one thing after another.
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February 1633
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Galileo is eventually placed on trial and at his old age, is forced to make the journey to Rome. He is under suspicion of "vehement suspicion of heresy," but is convicted of holding and teaching the Copernican belief. He is placed under house arrest for eight years until his death.
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1634
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Despite his house arrest Galileo publishes Discorsi e dimostrazioni mathematiche intorno a due nuove scienze attenenti alla meccanica (Dialogue Concerning Two New Sciences, a work about the principles of mechanics.
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1638
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Galileo makes the discovery, months before he went completely blind, that the moon makes monthly wobbles on its axis, called liberations.
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January 8, 1642
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Galileo Galilei dies from a long illness.
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