Aloysius Lilius (c. 1510 – 1574), also variously referred to as Luigi Lilio, Luigi Giglio, or Aluise Baldassar Lilio, was an Italian doctor, astronomer, philosopher and chronologist, and also the "primary author" who provided the proposal that (after modifications) became the basis of the Gregorian Calendar reform of 1582.[1][2]
The crater Lilius on the Moon is named after him. In computer science, the Lilian date is the number of days since adoption of the Gregorian Calendar, on 15 October 1582.
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Not much is known about the early life of Lilius/Lilio/Giglio. It is known that he came from Calabria, Italy, from Cirò (or Zirò). He studied medicine and astronomy in Naples, after which he served Earl Carafa.[3] He settled in Verona and died in 1576. Although he was still alive at the time when his proposal was presented at Rome, it does not seem that he made the presentation, it was handled by his brother Antonio, also a physician and astronomer.[4]
He is primarily known as the "first author" of the Gregorian Calendar: he wrote the proposal on which (after modifications) the calendar reform was based. Lilio's brother Antonio presented the manuscript to Pope Gregory XIII; it was passed to the calendar reform commission in 1575.[5] The commission issued a printed summary entitled Compendium novae rationis restituendi kalendarium (Compendium of a New Plan for the Restitution of the Calendar), printed 1577 and circulated within the Roman Catholic world in early 1578 as a consultation document. Lilio's manuscript itself is not known to have survived; the printed 'Compendium' is the nearest known source for the details it contained.[6][7]
The processes of consultation and deliberation meant that the reform to the calendar did not occur until 1582, six years after the death of Luigi Lilio in 1576. The reform had by then received some modifications in points of detail by the reform commission, in which one of the leading members was Christopher Clavius; Clavius afterwards wrote defences and an explanation of the reformed calendar, including an emphatic acknowledgement of Lilio's work, especially for his provision of a useful reform for the lunar cycle: "We owe much gratitude and praise to Luigi Giglio who contrived such an ingenious Cycle of Epacts which, inserted in the calendar, always shows the new moon and so can be easily adapted to any length of the year, if only at the right moments the due adjustment is applied."[8] The papal bull ("Inter gravissimas") was issued on February 24, 1582, ordering Catholic clergy to adopt the new calendar, and exhorting Catholic sovereigns to do the same.[1]
Year 2010 is the 500th year since the Astronomer birth date and several activities have been organized (by Italian astronomers) in order to recognize the great work performed by Luigi Lilio. In particular, in Torretta di Crucoli(Crotone, Italy), a new astronomical group has been created and entitled to Luigi Lilio: Circolo Astrofili Luigi Lilio Torretta (C.A.L.L.T.)
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