In the year 2023, it was the 550th anniversary of Nicolaus Copernicus’ birth and the 480th anniversary of his death. The Sejm of the Republic of Poland declared this year the Year of Copernicus. It was as part of the anniversary celebrations that a film was made in Olsztyn about the plaque located in the cloisters of the Warmia Chapter Castle, now the Museum of Warmia and Masuria in Olsztyn.
Nicolaus Copernicus lived in Warmia for over 40 years, most of his 70-year life. At the time, the land was an ecclesiastical principality comprising the Warmia Chapter as part of the so-called Royal Prussia within the Crown of the Polish Kingdom.
Thanks to the patronage of his uncle, Lucas Watzenrode, Bishop of Warmia, Copernicus studied the liberal arts at the Academy of Cracow, which included mathematics, cosmology and astronomy, also the construction and use of astronomical tables and the use of astronomical instruments. Then, already as a Warmian canon, he was sent by his uncle to study canon law in Bologna, Italy, and then medicine in Padua. In 1503 he obtained his doctorate in canon law at the University of Ferrara. On his return to Poland, he became secretary and a medical officer to Bishop Lucas Watzenrode in Lidzbark Warmiński. In 1510, as a canon (without being ordained), he moved to Frombork, where he served as a chancellor at the cathedral. In the observatory he set up in one of the city’s towers, he conducted astronomical observations, thanks to which he acquired arguments challenging the then prevailing geocentric theory. Copernicus set out his heliocentric views in a work entitled ‘Commentariolus’, or ‘Commentary’, written for a circle of close friends and associates and which was circulated in copies around Europe. In it, he points out the inaccuracies and defects of the hitherto prevailing geocentric theory and puts forward his own theses concerning the movement of the celestial bodies. He considers the Sun to be the centre of the Cosmos and the Earth to be one of many celestial bodies orbiting around it. Copernicus proposes that any movements observed in the sky can be explained by the movement of the Earth, rather than the entire firmament. However, this theory required careful elaboration and evidence, and on this Copernicus worked almost to the end of his life.