Biography

Monday, 18 May 2026

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Ludwig van Beethoven
Later, Ludwig's father hired better teachers.
The most important of them was the composer and organist Christian Gottlob Neefe, who introduced the ...
Peter the Great
He organized a network of secular schools at the elementary level.
He reformed the existing Cyrillic alphabet, creating a new script. He established the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences.
Christopher Columbus
From Nicaraguan tribesmen he learned of the "rich kingdoms" of the - Mayan and possibly Inca civilizations and of the "great sea" (Pacific Ocean) farther west.
However, he was unable to find a water passage to this body of water. After losing two of his four s ...
Aristotle
Aristotle favored patriarchy.
Despite believing that society may be content only when both men and women are equally pleased, he c ...
Ludwig van Beethoven
In 1810, Beethoven was hailed by the writer and composer Ernst Hoffmann in an influential review of the Allgemeinemusikalische Zeitung as the greatest of the three "Romantic" composers.
According to Hoffmann, he was ahead of Haydn and Mozart in this ranking. He wrote that in Beethoven' ...
Jane Austen
Jane had numerous siblings - six brothers and one sister.
Her eldest brother James was ordained to the priesthood and served in the parish of Steventon toward ...
Gaius Julius Caesar
The plot against Caesar had its beginning on February 22, three weeks before the murder.
On that day Gaius Cassius Longinus and Marcus Junius Brutus met, and during their conversation, they ...
Rasputin
In 1905, Rasputin returned to St. Petersburg. A circle of his friends led to his presentation at the Tsar's court.
The Tsar's family was then going through a difficult time, both in national governance and family tr ...
Napoleon Bonaparte
The outbreak of the French Revolution did not immediately cause Napoleon to join it.
Instead, he tried to join the Corsican insurgents of Paoli (Corsican national hero, leader of the in ...
Napoleon Bonaparte
Napoleon's initial military successes in Malta and Lower Egypt were followed by the destruction of the French fleet by Admiral Nelson's squadron of English ships at the mouth of the Nile.
The interference of Turkish troops in the conflict and the seizure of Malta by the English forced the French to capitulate in 1801.