Anders Spole

Summary

Anders Spole (13 June 1630 – 1 August 1699) was a Swedish mathematician and astronomer. He was born at a farm in Målen [sv], the son of blacksmith Per Andersson and his wife Gunilla Persdotter.[1] At the age of twelve he started studying at Jönköpings skola and was sent to the University of Greifswald in 1652.[1] After three years of studies he continued at other universities in Prussia and Saxony, until his return to Barnarp in 1655, where he started preaching in the local church.[1] He continued to study mathematics at Uppsala University, while at the same time being a tutor baron Sjöblad's sons.[1] In 1663, he became a master craftsman of fireworks and the arts of navigation.[1] The following year he accompanied the young Sjöblads on their peregrination around Europe.[2]

A 19th-century woodcut of Anders Spole

When he returned in 1667, he was named professor in mathematics at the newly founded Lund University; in 1672 he became the principal of that university.[1] He retained this position until 1676 when the university was dissolved because of the Scanian War.[3] During this war he fought on the Swedish side, and he held ground at the fortress in Jönköping. He fought at the Battle of Landskrona in 1677.[2]

In 1679, he took up a professorship in astronomy at Uppsala University, and built an astronomical observatory in his home in central Uppsala.[3] The building, along with all his instruments, was destroyed in the large city fire in Uppsala in 1702.[2][3] In 1695, by the order of King Karl XI, he travelled to Torneå and Kengis together with Johannes Bilberg to study the midnight sun.[4]

Spole married Martha Lindelius, a distant relative of Carl von Linné, in 1669.[2] Spole's sons were knighted in 1715 for their conduct during the war.[4] His grandson Anders Celsius was an astronomer who invented a temperature scale where 100 originally represented the freezing point of water and 0 represented the boiling point. Jean-Pierre Christin, in 1744 reversed the scale to create the centigrade scale, renamed in 1948 to the Celsius scale in use today.[5][6]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Stjernquist, Otto (2006). "Om Anders Spole och hans ättlingar". Tabergs bergslag 2006(21),: pp. 51–55 : ill.. 0281-9058. ISSN 0281-9058. Libris 10288093
  2. ^ a b c d Carlsson, Sverker (1989). "Anders Spole: professor och krigare". Årsskrift / Byarums hembygdsförening 1989,: pp. 26–30 : ill.. 0281-9112. ISSN 0281-9112. Libris 11328490
  3. ^ a b c Nordenmark, Nils V.E. (1931). Anders Spole: professor i astronomi i Lund och Uppsala. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell. Libris 1193743
  4. ^ a b La Motraye, Aubry de; Wiklund Karl Bernhard, Bring Samuel E., Hultenberg Hugo (1988). Seigneur A. de La Motrayes resor 1711–1725. Stockholm: Rediviva. p. 340. Libris 7605968. ISBN 91-7120-212-9
  5. ^ "Anders Celsius - Biography". Archived from the original on 2021-05-04. Retrieved 2021-05-04.
  6. ^ "Anders Celsius (1701-1744)". Archived from the original on 2021-04-28. Retrieved 2021-05-04.

External links edit

  • Swedish Biographical Dictionary entry
  •   Media related to Anders Spole at Wikimedia Commons