William Herschel, the discoverer of the planet that we now call Uranus, was asked to suggest a name for his discovery and selected Georgium Sidus, meaning George's Star. This was a reference to King George III, who was then King of the United Kingdom. It was some 70 years before all parties finally settled on Uranus as the accepted name for this planet.
Uranus was originally named 'Georgium Sidus' in honor of King George III of England by its discoverer, William Herschel, in 1781.
William Herschel decided to name Uranus Georgium Sidus (George's Star), or the "Georgian Planet" in honour of his new patron, King George III
Originally, Uranus was going to be named "Georgium Sidus" after King George III of England. However, it was ultimately named Uranus after the Greek god of the sky.
The planet Uranus' original name was Georgium Sidus. The name was chosen by Herschel in honor of King George III.
The planet was originally named Georgium Sidus in 1781 when it was discovered by William Herschel. But there was already a tradition of naming planets from Roman mythology. In Roman mythology "Uranus" was the father of the Titans and a sky god.
Sir William Herschel decided to name the planet now known as Uranus Georgium Sidus "George's Star/ Georgian Planet" in honour of his new patron, King George III.
'Georgian star' (Georgium sidus) Later renamed to Uranus - much to the delight of children all over the world.
Herschel observed Uranus on March 13, 1781 and originally thought it to be a comet. It had been previously observed as a "star" by astronomers John Flamsteed and Pierre Lemonnier, and was finally classified as a planet in 1783. Until 1850, it was known by the name Georgium Sidus, after King George III.
they did not have a fist name for uranus they had numbers for uranus before uranus was named uranus
The new planet beyond Saturn was discovered by William Herschel in March 1781. He initially named the planet "Georgium Sidus" after King George III of England, but it was later renamed Uranus.
The man who discovered Uranus, William Herschel, initially named it "Georgium Sidus" in honor of King George III of England. It was eventually renamed Uranus by Johann Bode to follow the tradition of naming planets after Roman deities.
Although William Herschel is credited with discovering Uranus in 1781, later records showed that John Flamsteed viewed it more than once in 1690. However, he believed it was a star, and named it 34 Tauri.