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Victor Anestin (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈviktor anesˈtin]; 17 September 1875 – 5 November 1918) was a Romanian journalist, science popularizer, astronomer and science fiction writer.

Victor Anestin
Born(1875-09-17)17 September 1875
Bacău, Romania
Died5 November 1918(1918-11-05) (aged 43)
Bucharest, Romania
NationalityRomania
Occupationastronomer
journalist
writer

Biography


First page of Orion magazine, 1st issue, September 1907
First page of Orion magazine, 1st issue, September 1907

Born in Bacău, Victor Anestin was the son of actor Ion Anestin. He graduated high school in Craiova and went on to work for some measly wages as proof reader for various Bucharest newspapers.[1]

As an astronomer, he made a few original observations over planet Venus and published several articles in foreign journals such as La Nature, Monthly Register and L'Astronomie.[1]

Between 1907 and 1912, he published the first Romanian astronomical journal, Orion and in 1908, he was the founder of the Societatea astronomică română "Camille Flammarion". In 1912, Anestin became the director of the Ziarul Călătoriilor, which he renamed in Ziarul ştiinţelor populare ("Journal of Popular Sciences") and its circulation rose to 15,000. Together with C. I. Istrati, he founded Universitatea Populară din București in 1912 and at the end of the year 1913, he founded the Prietenii Ṣtiinţei association.[2]


Legacy


Anestin wrote three science fiction novels and a large number of articles and over a hundred booklets about science.[2]

In his novel A Celestial Tragedy (published in February 1914), Anestin has one of the earliest descriptions of the possibility of using the atomic power for war purposes, being published in the same year as H. G. Wells' The World Set Free.[3]

In physics, they have managed to go to the roots of the structure of matter; moreover, at present, they make use of intra-atomic power [...] They have used this extraordinary power in wars as well; but, because of its disastrous effects, the states have signed a convention under which they pledge to use it for scientific purposes alone."[3]

The astronomical observatory of Bacău bears his name.[4]


Science fiction novels



Notes


  1. Manolescu, p.218
  2. Manolescu, p.219
  3. Ion Hobana, "Nuclear War Fiction in Eastern Europe" Archived July 23, 2008(Date mismatch), at the Wayback Machine, in Nuclear Texts and Contexts, Fall 1989
  4. "V. Anestin" Astronomical Observatory, cimec.ro

References





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