Giordano Bruno

Astronomer 1548 – 1600
Steady
#171
Historical Importance
477K
2025 Wikipedia Views
+5.6%
Year-over-Year
-4%
2025 Momentum

📈 2025 Monthly Wikipedia Views

About Giordano Bruno

Giordano Bruno (1548–1600) was an Italian philosopher, mathematician, poet, and astronomer who was executed by the Roman Inquisition for heresy. His radical cosmological theories—most notably his firm belief in an infinite universe with countless suns and planets—placed him far ahead of his time and established him as a foundational, if tragic, figure in the history of free thought and modern astronomy. His profound intellectual impact is recognized by his high ranking at #171 on MIT's Historical Popularity Index.

In the modern context of 2025 internet attention, Bruno's historical significance is not fully reflected. He garners approximately 477K annualized Wikipedia pageviews. While this represents a modest year-over-year growth of +5.6%, his attention level is roughly 1x his expected attention relative to his historical importance, indicating he is not being overlooked but is not a major topic of modern digital curiosity either. For contrast, the relatively more obscure figure of Pablo Escobar (#429 importance) generates nearly eight times the search traffic at 3.7M views in the same era.

Despite a slight dip in immediate interest, showing a -4% momentum loss between Q1 and Q3 of 2025, Bruno's legacy remains a potent symbol of intellectual conviction against institutional power.