Placidus de Titis explained

Placidus de Titis
Birth Date:1603 12, df=yes
Birth Place:Perugia, Umbria, Italy
Other Names:Didacus Prittus Pelusiensis
Death Place:Pavia, Lombardy, Italy
Occupation:Monk, mathematician, astronomer, astrologer
Known For:Placidian system
Parents:Tiberio Titi and Cecilia Titi
Workplaces:University of Pavia
Alma Mater:University of Padua

Placidus de Titis (also de Titus, Latinization of Placido de Titi, pseudonym Didacus Prittus Pelusiensis; 1603 - 1668) was an Olivetan monk and professor of mathematics, physics and astronomy at the University of Pavia from 1657 until his death. Placidus popularized the system of astrological houses now known as the "Placidian system", current in modern astrology. He did not invent the method; it is acknowledged by the 12th century Hebrew astrologer Abraham Ibn Ezra as the system employed by Ptolemy, an attribution that was accepted by Placidus.

Biography

Placidus was born in Perugia, into the Titi noble family. His father died early, and he was looked after by his mother Cecilia. He studied at the University of Padua where his uncle Girolamo de Titi was professor of theology. One of his teachers was the astronomer Andrea Argoli. The Duchy of Milan at the time was owned by Habsburg Spain, administered by Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria. The Archduke showed strong interest in science, especially occult sciences of alchemy and astrology, and Placidus dedicated his astrological house tables to him. In 1657 he was appointed professor of mathematics at the University of Pavia, a position he held for the rest of his life. Like his contemporary Jean-Baptiste Morin, Placidus opposed the copernican theory and retained a geocentric perspective, although there have been suggestions that he might have been a closet Copernican.[1]

He died in Pavia in 1668.

English translations of Placidus' Primum Mobile were published by Manoah Sibly (1789) and John Cooper (1814).

Works

Notes

  1. Krafft, Fritz. “astrology.” in Brill's New Pauly: Encyclopedia of the Ancient World, edited by Hubert Cancik et al., 3:985. Leiden: Brill, 2006.

Further reading