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Rümker, Christian Carl Ludwig (1788–1862)
by G. F. J. Bergman
This article was published in /*Australian Dictionary of Biography
*/, Volume 2, (MUP), 1967
Christian Carl Ludwig Rümker (1788-1862), astronomer, was born on 18 May
1788 at Stargard, Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Germany, the son of J. F.
Rümker, court-councillor. He showed a talent for mathematics, and his
father sent him to the Builders' Academy at Berlin where in 1807 he
passed the state examination as a master builder. He was disinclined to
follow this trade and, after working for about two years as a teacher of
mathematics in Hamburg, went to England in 1809. From 1809 to 1811 he
served as a midshipman in the East India Co. and then entered the
merchant navy, where he became a helmsman. Seized by a press-gang in
July 1813, he accepted a position as teacher of sea cadets with
officer's rank and served in H.M.S. /Benbow/, /Montagu/ and /Albion/. In
1816 he took part in a punitive expedition against Algiers. During his
Mediterranean service he made the acquaintance of Baron Franz-Xaver de
Zach, an Austrian astronomer, who induced him to pursue the study of
astronomy. His first publications about observations at Malta in the
/Edinburgh Philosophical Journal/ of 1819 drew the attention of other
scientists to his work, with much effect on his career.
Discharged from the navy in 1819 he returned to Hamburg, where he was
employed as teacher at the school of navigation. Recommended to Sir
Thomas Brisbane
by
Captain Peter Heywood, under whom he had served in the /Montagu/, Rümker
was engaged as the newly appointed governor's private astronomer. He
arrived in Sydney with the official party in 1821 and worked at
Brisbane's private observatory at Parramatta where on 2 June 1822 he
rediscovered Encke's comet. For this achievement Rümker was awarded a
silver medal and £100 by the Royal Astronomical Society and a gold medal
by the Institut de France. The grateful governor bestowed on Rümker a
grant of 1000 acres (405 ha) at Stonequarry Creek (Picton).
Disagreements with Brisbane over private and professional matters, as
well as animosity towards his collaborator in the observatory, James
Dunlop , led in June
1823 to Rümker's retirement to his farm which he had named Stargard
after his birthplace. There, on Reservoir Hill he continued his
observations and discovered two comets in the constellation Lion.
In London Captain Heywood had pleaded his case with Alexander McLeay
, the new
colonial secretary who, after Brisbane's departure, recalled Rümker to
Parramatta where he recommenced work in May 1826 and in September
discovered a new comet in the constellation Orion. On 21 December 1827
Governor (Sir) Ralph Darling
appointed him
government astronomer; he was the first to hold that title in Australia.
In 1828 Rümker received a second land grant of 1000 acres (405 ha) at
Stargard and later acquired another 200 acres (81 ha) by deed. In
February 1828 the Senate of Hamburg elected him director of its school
of navigation, but Rümker did not even answer the senate's letter as he
did not wish to relinquish his Australian position. In January 1829 he
went to London to obtain new instruments for the Parramatta observatory
and to induce the Royal Society to print his /Astronomical Observations
Made at the Observatory at Parramatta in New South Wales/. These were
published in 1829 as a supplementary volume to the /Philosophical
Transactions/ at government expense. His return to Parramatta seemed
assured when he became involved in a quarrel with Sir James South,
president of the Royal Astronomical Society, who used his influence to
have Rümker finally dismissed from British government service in June
1830. Rümker returned to Hamburg, where in 1831 he became director of
the school of navigation and in 1833 also director of the Hamburg
observatory. In 1831 Rümker published in Hamburg, /On the Most Effectual
Means of Encouraging Scientific Undertakings/, a bitter pamphlet about
his dismissal, but later he became reconciled with Brisbane. He
dedicated to Brisbane his /Preliminary Catalogue of Fixed Stars Intended
for a Prospectus of a Catalogue of the Stars of the Southern Hemisphere
Included Within the Tropic of Capricorn now Reduced from the
Observations Made in the Observatory at Parramatta/ (Hamburg, 1832).
In later years Rümker displayed great scientific activity. /The
Catalogue of Scientific Papers/ (1871), compiled by the Royal Society of
London, lists 233 papers by him in various scientific journals. Many
learned societies honoured him with membership and fellowship. In 1850
the King of Hanover conferred on him his gold medal for arts and
science. The greatest satisfaction in his life came in 1854 when the
Royal Astronomical Society gave him its gold medal. In 1857 he was
granted permanent leave for health reasons. He went to Lisbon, where he
continued to reduce his Parramatta observations. In Hamburg Professor
George F. W. Rümker, the illegitimate son of his housekeeper, became his
successor as director of the Hamburg observatory. In 1848 Rümker had
married a spinster, Mary Ann Crockford of Clerkenwell, Middlesex; they
had no children. He died at Lisbon on 21 December 1862 and was buried in
the churchyard of the English church at Estrella.
Rümker was a man of great integrity and indefatigable diligence, but he
was headstrong and of a somewhat violent character. When awarding the
gold medal of the Royal Astronomical Society to Rümker, the astronomer
royal, Sir George Biddell Airy, said that Rümker's dismissal was 'the
greatest misfortune that happened to Southern Astronomy', a comment that
did less than justice to James Dunlop, Rümker's associate and successor
at Parramatta.
Some of Rümker's work was published over the name Charles Stargard
Rümker, his land was granted to Charles Luis Rümker and the Royal
Astronomical Society presented its medal to Dr P. Karl Rümker.
Select Bibliography
* G. F. J. Bergman, ‘Christian Carl Ludwig Rümker (1788-1862),
Australia's First Government Astronomer’, /Journal and Proceedings/
(Royal Australian Historical Society), 46 (1960)
* Rümker letters, 1825-49 (State Library of New South Wales)
* correspondence with Dr John Lee (State Library of Victoria).
Related Entries in NCB Sites
* Antill, Henry Colden
(neighbour)go to ADB entry
Citation details
G. F. J. Bergman, 'Rümker, Christian Carl Ludwig (1788–1862)',
Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography,
Australian National University,
http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/rumker-christian-carl-ludwig-2615/text3607,
published first in hardcopy 1967, accessed online 13 September 2017.
*This article was first published in hardcopy in /*Australian Dictionary
of Biography*/, Volume 2, (MUP), 1967*
© Copyright Australian Dictionary of Biography, 2006-2017
Life Summary [details]
Alternative Names
* Rumker, Christian Carl Ludwig
* Rümker, Charles Stargard
* Rümker, Charles Luis
* Rümker, Karl
Birth
18 May 1788
Stargard
,
Mecklenburg-Strelitz
,
Germany
Death
1862
Lisbon
,
Portugal
Cultural Heritage
* German
Occupation
* astronomer
Australian Dictionary of Biography
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at the Australian National University
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