Biography

Thursday, 5 February 2026

Did you know?

Constantine the Great
Constantine died of natural causes on May 22, 337, in the imperial villa at Ancyron, near Nicomedia.
A few days before his death, Constantine I was baptized by the Arian bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia, although he had planned to be baptized in the waters of the Jordan River like Jesus.
Ludwig van Beethoven
The composer was originally buried at the St. Marx cemetery in Vienna, from which in 1888 the remains of the deceased were moved to the newly established Central Cemetery in Vienna, where they were placed in a grave adjacent to Schubert's.
Beethoven's funeral took place on March 29, 1827, attended by over 10.000 people. Viennese (the city ...
Gaius Julius Caesar
Cleopatra bore Caesar a son - Ptolemy Caesar, commonly known as Caesarion.
He was the last ruler of ancient Egypt and was killed on Octavian Augustus' orders when he invaded E ...
Tadeusz Kosciuszko
In 1808, he published a book, "Manoeuvres of horse artillery."
Probably the same year he left for Switzerland. He settled with Franz Xavier Zeltner in Solothurn, a ...
John Sutter
Although his colony was expanding, Sutter had financial problems.
In August 1848, Sutter's son John Augustus Sutter Jr. came to the colony to help his father get out of financial difficulties.
Michelangelo
After a year of apprenticeship in a painter's studio, he moved to the studio of the sculptor Bertoldo di Giovanni.
Bertoldo di Giovanni managed the Medici collection and introduced Michelangelo to the ruler of Flore ...
Antonio Vivaldi
Six months after his ordination, he began working as a music teacher at the Ospedale della Pieta orphanage for girls.
The Ospedale della Pieta was a convent, orphanage and music school for girls in Venice, operating be ...
Napoleon Bonaparte
State finances improved rapidly with the reform of tax offices and the introduction of indirect taxes on tobacco, liquor, and salt.
Such measures made it possible, for example, to pay pensions.
Rasputin
After the revolution and the overthrow of the monarchy, the new government ordered that the coffin containing the body be brought out and burned.
The ashes were scattered to the wind.
Tadeusz Kosciuszko
On October 10, 1794, a battle took place near Maciejowice between Polish troops commanded by the head of the insurrection Tadeusz Kosciuszko, and Russian troops under General Fyodor Denisov.
The battle ended with the defeat of the insurgent army and the imprisonment of wounded Kosciuszko in the Petropavlovsk fortress in St. Petersburg.