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Wilhelm Schickard

(Schickard, Wilhelm, 1592-1635)

Portrait of Wilhelm Schickard at Tübingen University
Image from Wikimedia Commons

Wilhelm Schickard (22 April 1592 – 24 October 1635) was a German professor of Hebrew and astronomy who became famous in the second part of the 20th century after Franz Hammer, a biographer (along with Max Caspar) of Johannes Kepler, claimed that the drawings of a calculating clock, predating the public release of Pascal's calculator by twenty years, had been discovered in two unknown letters written by Schickard to Johannes Kepler in 1623 and 1624. (From Wikipedia)

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