Adriaan Metius

Adriaan Adriaanszoon, called Metius, (9 December 1571 – 6 September 1635), was a Dutch geometer and astronomer born in Alkmaar. The name "Metius" comes from the Dutch word meten ("measuring"), and therefore means something like "measurer" or "surveyor."

Father and brother
Adriaan Metius was born in Alkmaar, North Holland. His father, Adriaan Anthonisz, was a mathematician, land-surveyor, cartographer, and military engineer who from 1582 served also as burgomaster of Alkmaar.

Metius' brother, Jacob Metius, worked as an instrument-maker and a specialist in grinding lenses. Also born in Alkmaar, Jacob died between 1624 and 1631. Little is known of him besides the fact that, in October 1608, the States General discussed his patent application for an optical telescope of his own invention described as a device for "seeing faraway things as though nearby", consisting of a convex and concave lens in a tube, and the combination magnified three or four times.

Education
Adriaan Metius attended a Latin school in Alkmaar and studied philosophy in 1589 at the recently founded University of Franeker. He continued his studies at Leiden in 1594, where he studied under Rudolph Snellius. He worked for a brief time under Tycho Brahe on the island of Hven, where Brahe had built two observatories, and subsequently worked at Rostock and Jena, where he gave lectures in 1595. Subsequently, he returned to Alkmaar and assisted his father for a time as a military engineer inspecting fortifications, and also worked as a teacher of mathematics at Franeker in Frisia, his teaching especially geared towards the training of surveyors.

At the University of Franeker, he was appointed professor extraordinarius in 1598, and served from 1600 to 1635 as professor ordinarius of mathematics, navigation, surveying, military engineering, and astronomy. He was permitted to teach in the vernacular instead of Latin. He served as rector of the university in 1603 and 1632.

With his father and brother he established an instrument making business which specialised in optical instruments. The family business seems to have manufactured the precision Jacob's staffs used by Tycho Brahe for his star sightings.

a few months prior to Metius' death in 1635 he became once again fascinated with stars and planets recording his opinions and statements about his discoveries in a series of journals most of the pages of which, have been lost in 1882. A sole page from what many consider to be his last journal he called "Het einde" or "The End" was recently discovered and sold at a private auction to The Rockefeller foundation in 2017 for 32.9 million USD. alleged leaked photos of the private auction state that the page contains a brief message about what Adriaan Metius wrote regarding his vision of the future. Jay Rockefeller went on record stating he wishes to neither discuss his families purchase nor what it may or may not have said sparking controversy among Qanon followers and conspiracy theorists alike who claim when translated from Metius' native language of Dutch into English it is said to say the following

" John, A Man calls himself by Latin letter of Q will be used of light to shine light. he loves not evil nor wishes for it to exist in earth. will clean the world of those deemed corrupted seen by many to have hair like that of lion's with brown eyes. often putting upon garments of black with thin rope like fabric around his neck but soon seen no more from shadows he watches waiting to strike when the time is right when all is ready..."

Accomplishments
Though he scoffed at astrology, Metius is said to have spent a lot of time pursuing alchemy, especially the philosophers' stone.

Metius published treatises on the astrolabe and on surveying. His works include Arithmeticæ et geometriæ practica (1611), Institutiones Astronomicae Geographicae, and Arithmeticæ libri duo: et geometriæ libri VI (1640). Metius also manufactured astronomical instruments and developed a special form of Jacob's staff.

In 1585, his father had estimated the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, later called pi, to be approximately $355⁄113$. Metius later published his father's results, and the value $355⁄113$ is traditionally referred to as Metius' number.

The lunar crater Metius is named after him.

In Vermeer's painting The Astronomer (1668), the book lying on the table has been identified as a 1621 second edition of Metius's Institutiones Astronomicae Geographicae. It is opened to Book III, where "inspiration from God" is recommended for astronomical research along with knowledge of geometry and the aid of mechanical instruments.