Do you know that a rare first edition of Copernicus’ book is housed at the UST?

UST, NCU collaborate on restoration of rare first edition of Copernicus’ seminal work on heliocentricity from 1543


At a glance

  • Copernicus’ historic work, ‘De revolutionibus orbium coelestium’ (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres), was originally printed in 1543 in Nuremberg, Holy Roman Empire. Its central thesis is heliocentrism, the astronomical model that positioned the sun at the center of the universe.


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FOR THE SAKE OF HISTORY Embassy of Poland Chargé d’affaires Mr. Jarosław Szczepankiewicz (seated, second from left) and NCU professor Dr. Mirosław Wachowiak (seated, rightmost), with UST prefect of libraries Rev. Fr. Ángel Aparicio, O.P. (seated, leftmost), UST OIRP director Prof. Lilian Sison, (seated third from left), and lecture participants at the UST Rector’s Hall

The University of Santo Tomas and Nicolaus Copernicus University/Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika (NCU/UMK) in Toruń, Poland, will collaborate on restoring the rare first edition copy of Copernicus’ book on heliocentrism housed in the UST Archives. Three professional restorers and conservators from NCU visited UST in Manila to assess the original print to prepare for the continuing partnership in restoring the book, which is a Polish cultural treasure.

The visit and partnership commemorate the 550th birth anniversary of the astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus, which was on Feb. 19, 2023.

The collaboration was borne out of the previous visit to UST of Jarosław Szczepankiewicz, chargé d’affaires of the Embassy of Poland in Manila to the university on May 13, 2022, where he was first shown one of the remaining 11 original copies. The UST Miguel de Benavides Library, the UST Research Center for Natural and Applied Sciences (RCNAS), the UST Office of International Relations and Programs (OIRP), and the UST College of Science will work with NCU for this endeavor.

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As part of this visit, NCU professor Dr. Mirosław Wachowiak from the Department of Conservation and Restoration of Modern and Contemporary Art, art conservator Dr. Jolanta Czuczko, and researcher Karolina Komsta-Slawińska from the Department of Paper and Leather Conservation met with UST OIRP director Prof. Lilian Sison, Ph.D., associate director Prof. Karen Santiago, Ph.D., and chief librarian Ma. Cecilia D. Lobo.

Later that afternoon, a delegation from the Embassy of Poland in Manila, including Szczepankiewicz, minister and counselor Anna Krzak-Danel, and assistant to the head of mission Ella May Arevalo, graced a meeting with the UST prefect of libraries Rev. Fr. Ángel Aparicio, O.P., acting archivist Rev. Fr. Gaspar Sigaya, O.P., head book restorer  Ginalyn Santiago, Graduate School academic staff and RCNAS researcher Prof. Maria Bernardita Maronilla-Reyes, Ph.D., who is a chemist conservator of paintings, paper and stone-built heritage, and executive assistant to the secretary-general Mr. Emmanuel Batulan, Ph.D. Following the meeting was an introduction by Wachowiak on the advanced book conservation and restoration processes employed by NCU.

Copernicus’ historic work, “De revolutionibus orbium coelestium” (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres), was originally printed in 1543 in Nuremberg, Holy Roman Empire, and had for its central thesis heliocentrism, or the astronomical model that positioned the sun at the center of the Universe, with earth and the other planets orbiting around it in circular paths. The Copernican model, as it would later be named, displaced the geocentric model of Ptolemy that had prevailed for centuries, which had placed Earth at the center of the universe.