Enlightenment · Europe · Science

1781

Herschel Discovers Uranus

March 13, 1781

A German-born organist in Bath, sweeping his homemade reflecting telescope through Gemini, spotted a greenish disc that moved. William Herschel thought it was a comet. Within months the astronomers agreed: it was a planet, the first found since antiquity. He named it for George III; everyone else called it Uranus.