Biography

Sunday, 31 May 2026
21 facts about Ada Lovelace
21 facts about Ada Lovelace
The first female programmer
Ada Lovelace was a British poet and mathematician who lived in the first half of the 19th century. She was the daughter of one of Britain's greatest d ...

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Roland Garros
The Stade Roland Garros tennis complex in Paris is named after Roland Garros.
It is located in the 16th arrondissement (district) of Paris, where the Grand Slam tennis tournament ...
Anna Pavlova
Anna died on January 23rd, 1931 in Hague, Netherlands, at the age of 49.
She died of pleurisy, which was a result of a 12-hour train delay she was forced to wait out in the ...
Anna Pavlova
Anna was known for her charity.
She supported Russian orphans in Paris after World War I. She also bought a house in Paris for 15 girls she supported with her earnings.
Ernest Hemingway
A cat named Big Boy Peterson accompanied Hemingway in his last moments at the Idaho estate.
Hemingway’s Cuban residence, the Finca, was home to sixty cats and many dogs, to which Hemingway cou ...
Tadeusz Kosciuszko
He was a very talented, outstanding student.
He studied Polish history and general history, philosophy, Latin, Polish, French, German, law, economics, arithmetic, geometry and surveying.
Constantine the Great
Constantine the Great also enacted several new laws regarding the Jews.
Jews were forbidden to persecute other Jews who converted to Christianity. They were forbidden to ow ...
Robert Oppenheimer
He was so absorbed in teaching that he lost touch with reality. He didn't read newspapers, listen to radio news, or use the telephone.
He learned about the economic crisis of 1929 from students who were in financial trouble. When he re ...
Amadeus Mozart
Since both Amadeus and Nannerl showed musical ability, the father gave up his career and devoted himself to the children's musical education.
Amadeus learned to play the harpsichord from the age of five (even as a three-year-old, he listened ...
Peter the Great
Many specialists in various fields came to Russia (about 750 people, mostly Dutch).
Among them were military officers, craftsmen, and people of science and art. Their task was to teach Russians and instill Western European progress in the country.
Aristotle
Aristotle remained in the Academy until 37 years of age.
After Plato’s death in 348 or 347, his nephew Speusippus took control of the academy. It is unknown, however, whether that was the reason Aristotle decided to leave the academy.