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  2. In 1632 he became a member of a group charged with the formation of younger Jesuits, among whom Daniello Bartoli. [3] He spent the 1633–1634 academic year in Mantua, where he collaborated with Niccolò Cabeo (1576–1650) in further pendulum studies.

  3. Riccioli spent eight years at the Jesuit College at Parma. Here he was taught by Giuseppe Biancani (1565-1624) and Riccioli later offered his thanks to Biancani who had a strong influence on him. Biancani was interested in astronomy and made observations of the sun and moon with a telescope.

  4. Jun 25, 2022 · Giovanni Battista Riccioli, S.J. (April 17, 1598 to June 25, 1671) Riccioli was a Jesuit priest, astronomer, and physicist. In 1651, he published a massive treatise on astronomy (the Almagestum Novum ), which became a standard reference work for astronomers throughout Europe for many decades.

  5. Apr 17, 2020 · The Jesuits ran three educational establishments in Parma, the university, a college for educating the sons of the nobility, and a Jesuit College, established around 1600, which Riccioli attended.

  6. He entered into the Society of the Jesuits in 1614, and having diligently cultivated all the different branches of learning as they were taught in that age, he was chosen teacher of philosophy, rhetoric, poetry, and theology, in the colleges of their order at Parma and Bologna; but his inclination leading him to the study of geography and astron...

  7. Jun 10, 2024 · Born at Ferrara in Italy, Riccioli was a Jesuit priest who spent most of his life at Bologna where he was professor of astronomy. In 1651 he produced his famous work Almagestum novum (The New Almagest).

  8. Jul 19, 2019 · Fr. Giovanni Battista Riccioli of the Society of Jesus was the first scientist to conduct precision experiments to measure gravity, and the first to develop the idea of the Coriolis Effect, among many other things.