Biography

Tuesday, 27 January 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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Amadeus Mozart
Like her sister Aloysia, Constance Weber was a singer.
Her marriage to Mozart lasted nine years, and during her marriage, Constance gave birth to six children, of whom only two sons, Franz Xaver Wolfgang and Karl Thomas, survived.
Anna Pavlova
Pavlova is considered the inventor of modern pointe shoes.
Although it was considered cheating during her times, her design was incorporated into the production of pointe shoes, allowing dancers with curved feet to perform with ease and less pain.
Frederic Chopin
He was famous, leading the life of a virtuoso, composing works that quickly became fashionable in the salons. He moved quickly from a small apartment at Boulevard Poissonniere to the fashionable district of Paris, and his friends called his apartment Olympus, because of the heavenly music that came from there.
He gave piano lessons to many great people: Baroness Rothschild, Princess Noailles, Caroline Hartmann and Adolf Gutmann.
Tadeusz Kosciuszko
Like many other activists, Kosciuszko decided to leave the country and go into exile in Saxony, as an emigration center of opponents of the Targowica Confederation was being formed in Leipzig and Dresden.
He only stayed in Leipzig for two weeks, then went to Paris to try to obtain French assistance there for the uprising planned in the Republic.
Salvador Dali
He was the first marquis of Dali de Pubol.
The castle of Pubol was a gift for Salvador's great love Gala. When Dali became the owner of the cas ...
Tadeusz Kosciuszko
In 1921, the Polish Sejm decided to bring Kosciuszko's heart to the country, which was realized on October 15, 1927.
Since June 13, 1983, the urn containing Tadeusz Kosciuszko's heart has been kept at the Royal Castle in Warsaw.
Nikola Tesla
He was a very hard-working student, working from 3 in the morning until 11 at night, excluding Sundays and holidays.
His father did not appreciate his success and hard work, and after he died in 1879, Nikola found a b ...
Tadeusz Kosciuszko
Tsarina Catherine the Great called Kosciuszko a "beast."
General Nathanael Greene (General of the Continental Army during the War of American Independence) called him "a master of his profession."
William Shakespeare
Young William attended a grammar school in Stratford, a prestigious institution where pupils were taught by Oxford and Cambridge magisters. The young Shakespeare learned Latin, history, ancient literature, rhetoric, basic grammar, and modern languages.
Raised a Catholic, he was very familiar with the Bible. As a city councilman’s son, he did not have ...
Napoleon Bonaparte
It is quite common to attribute the introduction of right-hand traffic to Napoleon.
Right-hand traffic was first introduced by Denmark in 1758. At first only in Copenhagen, and from 17 ...