Biography

Saturday, 22 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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Rasputin
Rasputin's disappearance caused unrest in Tsarskoye Selo, a town containing the residence of the Russian imperial family.
The perpetrators of the murder were quickly discovered, and they wanted to punish them severely, but ...
Ada Lovelace
After her first meeting with Charles Babbage, Lovelace visited him whenever she could.
Babbage was impressed with her intellect and analytical skills. He called her the "The Enchantress o ...
Napoleon Bonaparte
To consolidate his power in France, after a nationwide plebiscite, Napoleon crowned himself Emperor of the French on December 2, 1804.
Napoleon by this time had established himself as a powerful ruler, and to add splendor to the corona ...
Frederic Chopin
Even as a child Frederic made numerous appearances in the salons of the Warsaw aristocracy.
Thanks to Żywny, who wrote down his compositions of variations and dances according to Frederic's in ...
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."
John Sutter
Sutter claimed he was a member of the Royal Swiss Guard and introduced himself as Captain John Sutter.
To this day his claims have not been verified. Either way, he titled himself that way which helped his career as a colonizer of California.
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).
Gaius Julius Caesar
Further military successes came after 61 BC when Julius Caesar went to Spain.
He took over as governor of the province of Hispania Ulterior, where he decided to conquer regions n ...
Napoleon Bonaparte
Napoleon is also traditionally credited with a geometric theorem known as Napoleon's theorem, declaring that the orthocenters of equilateral triangles built on the sides of any triangle are the vertices of the equilateral triangle.
However, there is no evidence of Napoleon's contribution to formulating or proving this theorem.
Hypatia
She educated successive members of Alexandria's elite, and her students held high positions.
Hypatia came from an aristocratic background and circulated among the ruling and cultural elite. Her ...