Autolycus of Pitane

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De sphaera quae movetur liber ("The free moving sphere"), 1587

Autolycus of Pitane (ca. 360 BC—d. ca. 290 BC) was a Greek astronomer, mathematician, and geographer. He was born in Pitane, a town of Aeolis, in Asia Minor. His works were probably completed in Athens between the years 335 BC and 300 BC. Autolycus' surviving works include a book on spheres (called On the Moving Sphere) and another on the rising and setting of celestial bodies. On the Moving Sphere is believed to be the oldest mathematical treatise from ancient Greece that is completely preserved.[1]

Euclid mentions Autolycus' work. Autolycus also taught Arcesilaus.

Maurolycus translated Autolycus' works in the sixteenth century.

Mathematics[change | change source]

Autolycus studied the movements of a sphere. It is believed they were the earliest written mathematics related books which have actually survived. Theodosius' Sphaerics was based on Autolycus' work on spheres.

Astronomy[change | change source]

Autolycus studied the relationship between the rising and the setting of the celestial bodies, and wrote that "any star which rises and sets always rises and sets at the same point in the horizon."

A crater on the Moon is named after him.

References[change | change source]

  1. "Autolycus of Pitane Biography". about.com. 2012. Archived from the original on 15 January 2013. Retrieved 21 July 2012.