Ulugh Beg, a 15th-century Timurid ruler and grandson of Tamerlane, built the Samarkand Observatory in 1429, which calculated star positions with unprecedented accuracy that would not be matched for three centuries, demonstrating that medieval astronomers achieved remarkable scientific precision through mathematical methods without telescopes.
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This Medieval Warlord Built the World's Most Advanced ObservatoryAdded:
Did you know a medieval warlord built an observatory so advanced it wouldn't be matched for three centuries? Meet Ulugh Beg, grandson of Tamerlane, conqueror of cities. But this wasn't your typical bloodthirsty ruler. By day, he crushed enemies on the battlefield. By night, he mapped the heavens with mathematical precision that would make modern scientists jealous. In 1429, his Samarkand Observatory calculated star positions more accurately than telescopes built centuries later. His obsession with astronomy eventually got him killed. His own son assassinated him, claiming he cared more about stars than his empire.
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