Hell, with another Jesuit priest,
János Sajnovics, tried to explore the already widely discussed but insufficiently documented
affinity between the language of the
Sami,
Finns and the
Hungarians during and after their residency in
Vardø. (
Demonstratio idioma Ungarorum et Lapponum idem esse, 1770 Copenhagen) Hell became the director of the
Vienna Observatory in 1756. He published the astronomical tables ("Ephemerides for the Meridian of Vienna"). Hell and his assistant
János Sajnovics went to
Vardø in the far north of
Norway (then part of
Denmark-Norway) to observe the 1769
transit of Venus. Hell was one of the first group of astronomers to observe the complete transit; he took the most northernly viewpoint (in Lapland), while others, including
Captain Cook and
Joseph Banks,
Guillaume Le Gentil and
Jean-Baptiste Chappe d'Auteroche took readings around the world. He was elected as a foreign member of the
Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters on October 13, 1769. This society also funded the publication of his 1770 account of the Venus passage
Observatio transitus Veneris ante discum Solis die 3. Junii anno 1769 (Copenhagen, 1770). Besides
astronomy, Hell also had an interest in
magnet therapy (the alleged healing power of magnets), although it was
Franz Anton Mesmer who went further with this and received most of the credit. == Honors and awards ==