The Pope excommunicated Galileo.
he was found guilty and was excommunicated and was never aloud back. excommunicated means that you are kicked out of the church. you can buy yourself back into the church by bribing them with a lot of money.
Johannes Kepler, the sixteenth century German astronomer, was excommunicated, but from the Lutheran church, not the Catholic church. His offense had nothing to do with astronomy, but with the relationship between matter and 'spirit' in the doctrine of the Eucharist. Nicolaus Copernicus was a devout Catholic, a canon in his church, and, late in life, became a priest. He was never excommunicated Galileo was never imprisoned, never tortured, and never excommunicated. He was, in fact, a devout Catholic before and after his trial, a close friend of the pope, and sent at least one daughter to the convent. Answer: Galileo because many people were not ready for his ideas
Because they thought it wasn't right and blamed him for heresy.
Galileo Galilei did not invent the thermometer. The thermometer was actually invented by Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary Galileo's contemporary, Galileo Galilei. The thermometer was actually invented by Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary.
No. Galileo Galilei was put under house arrest for life, during an inquisition by the Catholic Church, for claiming that the Earth was not the centre of the Universe, as was the widely held view at the time.He was also excommunicated (meaning in the eyes of the Church he was destined to go to hell). The Vatican only revoked the excommunication in the mid 1990s. Better late than never.
he was found guilty and was excommunicated and was never aloud back. excommunicated means that you are kicked out of the church. you can buy yourself back into the church by bribing them with a lot of money.
They excommunicated him and put him under house arrest for life.
Johannes Kepler, the sixteenth century German astronomer, was excommunicated, but from the Lutheran church, not the Catholic church. His offense had nothing to do with astronomy, but with the relationship between matter and 'spirit' in the doctrine of the Eucharist. Nicolaus Copernicus was a devout Catholic, a canon in his church, and, late in life, became a priest. He was never excommunicated Galileo was never imprisoned, never tortured, and never excommunicated. He was, in fact, a devout Catholic before and after his trial, a close friend of the pope, and sent at least one daughter to the convent. Answer: Galileo because many people were not ready for his ideas
When Galileo went against the church he was excommunicated. The Church had previously believed in the geocentric planetary model (where the earth was the center of the universe and the planets rotated around it), and when Galileo came up with the heliocentric model (the planets revolved around the sun), the Church asked him to disregard it, and when he didn't they excommunicated him
Because they thought it wasn't right and blamed him for heresy.
No, he was excommunicated from the Lutheran Church.
King John was excommunicated in England
Galileo Galilei did not invent the thermometer. The thermometer was actually invented by Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary Galileo's contemporary, Galileo Galilei. The thermometer was actually invented by Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary.
No. Galileo Galilei was put under house arrest for life, during an inquisition by the Catholic Church, for claiming that the Earth was not the centre of the Universe, as was the widely held view at the time.He was also excommunicated (meaning in the eyes of the Church he was destined to go to hell). The Vatican only revoked the excommunication in the mid 1990s. Better late than never.
The famous scientist whom we usually refer to as Galileo was named, in full, Galileo Galilei. His first name actually was Galileo.
Galileo's full name was Galileo Galilei.
Galileo was forced to recant his theories about the Earth's rotation because of the Church. His theories went against the biblical scriptures and therefore he was forced by the Pope and the clergy to retract all his theories from society.