FINÉ, Oronce - b. 1494 Briançon, d. 1555 Paris - WGA

FINÉ, Oronce

(b. 1494 Briançon, d. 1555 Paris)

French astronomer, cartographer and mathematician. He was educated in Paris and obtained a degree in medicine in 1522. He spent time in prison in 1518 and again in 1524, probably for practicing judicial astrology. In 1531, he was appointed to the chair of mathematics at the Collége Royal, where he taught until his death. His most notable works are Arithmetica Pratica, printed in Paris in 1530 and reprinted in 1544, and the Protomathesis (in 15 books), published in 1532. He is also famous for trying to square the circle and was one of the first mathematicians to use decimal numbers.

Christ with a Globe
Christ with a Globe by

Christ with a Globe

Christ holds an up-to-date globe: faith embraces the new knowledge in the Renaissance.

Heart-shaped Map
Heart-shaped Map by

Heart-shaped Map

Fin�’s heart-shaped (cordiform) map projection may be his most famous illustration, and was frequently employed by other notable cartographers.

Oronce Fine was one of the rare French geographers in the Renaissance to prepare maps of the world. This map is bordered with a handsome Renaissance decoration: two columns support a pediment bearing a Latin inscription signifying “A new and complete description of the world,” interrupted in the middle by a coat of arms of France. Also to be noted is a vast southern land mass (Terra Australis), recently discovered but not yet explored.

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