Ernst Zinner | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1886-02-02)2 February 1886 |
| Died | 30 August 1970(1970-08-30) (aged 84) |
| Alma mater | University of Jena University of Munich |
| Known for | History of Astronomy |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Astronomy,history of science |
| Institutions | Remeis Observatory |
Ernst Zinner (2 February 1886 inGoldberg,Silesia – 30 August 1970) was a Germanastronomer and notedhistorian of astronomy. He was a director of the observatory atBamberg. His major work was on the diffusion of Copernican ideas. During the Third Reich, he refused to become a member of theNSDAP.
Zinner was born in Goldberg, Silesia. After school at Johanneum Gymnasium in Liegnitz he studied astronomy and mathematics at Munich and Jena and obtained his PhD in 1907 at the University of Jena, followed by stays at the University of Lund working withC. V. L. Charlier, the University of Paris withJ. H. Poincaré, and theKönigstuhl Observatory in Heidelberg underW. Valentiner. His doctoral work was on using stereoscopic images to examine the positions of celestial bodies. At the Heidelberg observatory he worked on double stars for a star catalogue begun in 1908 by Przybyllok and Völkel. From 1 February 1910, Zinner worked as an assistant toErnst Hartwig atRemeis Observatory, Bamberg. Here, on 23 October 1913 he rediscovered theComet Giacobini-Zinner, which had been previously discovered byMichel Giacobini in 1900. His main work during this time was on variable stars. After working as a meteorologist during World War I, Zinner returned to Bamberg, but then moved toMunich to work in geodesy. In 1924 Zinner received the professor's title from theUniversity of Munich. He was appointed director of Remeis-Observatory inBamberg, Germany, in 1926 and retired in 1956. During this time his main astronomical work centered on stellar astronomy. His main speciality and interest, however, was Renaissance Astronomy and the history of astronomical instruments, an area in which he started working in 1925.[1]
In 1943, during the World War II, Zinner published the bookEntstehung und Ausbreitung der coppernicanischen Lehre on the genesis and diffusion of the Copernican theory. The book largely promoted German astronomy and tries to connect Copernicus to Germany, noting that his grandfather came from Krakow then a German town. A Nazi letter noted that Zinner was associated with the German National People's Party and that he had not become a member of the NSDAP in 1938. The letter however said that Zinner could not be considered an enemy of the state. Zinner's work included the work of medieval Jewish astronomers in an index but the text made no mention of astronomers likeDavid Gans although noting briefly that Gans had assisted Tycho Brahe.[2]
His obituaries quote a total of 9000 printed pages on the subject of astronomical history, with the most significant ones focusing on biographies and cataloguing early astronomical works and instruments.[2] In 1967, fearing that the Soviet Union would take it away, he sold nearly 2700 of his books and manuscripts to the San Diego State College and his personal papers to the Frankfurt University which gave him an honorary doctorate in 1961.[3][4][5]