Biography

Thursday, 13 November 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
During the Hellenistic period, Homer was the object of hero worship in several cities.
One of the most distinctive features of Greek religion was the worship of heroes (heros), who became ...
Peter the Great
Pyotr I Alekseyevich, commonly known as Peter the Great, was born in 1672 in Moscow.
He was the son of Alexei I Mikhailovich (Tsar of Russia from 1645 to 1676, father of three successiv ...
Aristotle
Aristotle was married to a Greek embryologist and biologist, Pythias the Elder.
She was an adoptive daughter of Atarneus’ tyrant ruler, Hermias of Atarneus. They had a daughter, Pythias the Younger.
Salvador Dali
Was he inspired by Einstein?
Critics and scholars wondered if Dali's famous Melting Watch was inspired on Einsteins theory of relativity.
Christopher Columbus
As a widower, Columbus met Beatriz Enriquez in Spain, whom he never married but left her a large portion of his fortune.
They formed a good relationship, Beatriz treated Diego as her own son and soon after, in 1488, she b ...
Roland Garros
In 1911, he set an altitude record of 3950 meters.
This record was broken a year later by Austrian aviator Phillipp von Blaschke (4360 meters), but Gar ...
Michelangelo
He was painting the Last Judgment on the Sistine Chapel's altar wall from 1534 to 1541.
As a young man, Michelangelo was greatly impressed by the sermons of Girolamo Savonarola, a Dominica ...
John Sutter
He wanted to build a town named Sutterville.
His son, John Augustus Sutter Jr., proposed the name Sacramento, derived from the Sacramento River. ...
Kate Middleton
The length of their informal relationship earned Kate an unflattering nickname.
The press began ironically calling her Waity Katie after the couple’s subsequent reunion, still not ...
Peter the Great
He introduced the Julian calendar in place of the Byzantine calendar.
At the time, the Julian calendar was used only in Protestant countries; Catholics had already been using the Gregorian calendar for 100 years.