Page:The Gradual Acceptance of the Copernican Theory of the Universe.djvu/40

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bring the new system into general recognition and gradual acceptance than did the theoretical works.[1]

Opposition to the theory had not yet gathered serious headway. There is record[2] of a play poking fun at the system and its originator, written by the Elbing schoolmaster (a Dutch refugee from the Inquisition) and given in 1531 by the villagers at Elbing (3 miles from Frauenburg). Elbing and Ermeland were hostile to each other, Copernicus was well known in Elbing though probably from afar, for there seems to have been almost no personal intercourse between canons and people, and the spread of Luther's teachings had intensified the hostility of the villagers towards the Church and its representatives. But not until Giordano Bruno made the Copernican system the starting-point of his philosophy was the Roman Catholic Church seriously aroused to combat it. Possibly Osiander's preface turned opposition aside, and certainly the non-acceptance of the system as a whole by Tycho Brahe, the leading astronomer of Europe at that time, made people slow to consider it.


  1. Holden in Pop. Sci., 119.
  2. Prowe: II, 233-244.
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