Biography

Friday, 5 December 2025
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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Homer
The epics "The Iliad" and "The Odyssey" are the oldest monuments of Greek and European literature in general.
 Thanks to these two works, Homer is considered one of the pillars of modern Western literature, serving as a source of inspiration and knowledge of antiquity.
Frederic Chopin
In addition to his musical talent, Chopin also revealed others. Many biographers claim that he was a universal genius.
He drew caricatures of his teachers, which aroused the admiration of those drawn. He also improvised ...
Frederic Chopin
Since 1927 the Frederic Chopin International Piano Competition has been held in Warsaw.
It is the oldest monographic music competition in the world. Its author was Jerzy Żurawlew, a Polish ...
William Shakespeare
At 18, Shakespeare married 26-years old Anne Hathaway. Because of the age difference and Anne’s pregnancy, it was suspected that the wedding was a necessity.
They had three children, a daughter Susanna, born in 1583, and twins Hamnet and Judith, born in 1585 ...
Charles Darwin
In 1835, Darwin experienced an earthquake in Chile.
High in the Andes, he saw shells and numerous tree fossils exposed by the tremors. From this he conc ...
Jane Austen
In 2017, a £10 bill with Jane Austen's likeness was introduced into circulation in the United Kingdom.
It is the only British banknote to have an image of a woman on the reverse (apart from the British Queen, whose image is on the obverse as an image of the monarch).
Anna Pavlova
In 1909, she traveled to Paris and toured with the Ballets Russes.
The Ballets Russes was founded by Sergei Pavlovich Diaghilev in Paris in 1909. For the next 20 years ...
Ludwig van Beethoven
After several years of struggling with disability, Beethoven was forced to completely give up public performances and devote himself exclusively to composing.
It was a great blow to him, because concerts were an important source of income, and his deafness al ...
Christopher Columbus
In 1476 he took part in an expedition of Genoese merchant ships to Lisbon and Flanders.
During this expedition, near Cape St. Vincent, a fleet of Franco-Portuguese attacked a Genoese convo ...
Peter the Great
Eventually, both brothers became tsars, with their sister Sophia as regent.
The brothers co-ruled until Ivan V died in 1696.