Biography

Monday, 1 December 2025

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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 ...
Christopher Columbus
In May 1492, Columbus arrived at the port of Palos in Andalusia, where the town provided him with two caravels: Niña and Pinta, and leased a larger ship, the caravel "Santa Maria," as his flagship.
On August 3, 1492, the three ships set sail with a crew of about 90 men and, after a brief stopover at Las Palmas in the Canary Islands, set course westward. Columbus' first expedition had begun.
Nikola Tesla
In his laboratories, he developed the basics of alternating current generation and transmission, which are still used worldwide.
He also created designs for devices powered directly by alternating currents, such as the fluorescen ...
Gaius Julius Caesar
Caesar's visit to Egypt resulted in an affair with Cleopatra and a civil war.
The so-called Alexandrian War was fought between the supporters of Ptolemy XIII and his sister Cleop ...
Jane Austen
The novel "Emma" was published in 1816 in three volumes, with an added dedication to the Prince Regent.
It was written between 21 January 1814 and 29 March 1815. Jane began work on a book about a heroine ...
Charles Darwin
Not all of his children reached adulthood.
Of the children who survived, George, Francis, and Horace became prominent scientists (an astronomer, botanist, and civil engineer). Son Leonard became a soldier, politician, and economist.
Robert Oppenheimer
The bombs were dropped on Japan on August 6 and 9, 1945.
President Harry Truman authorized the dropping of "Little Boy" on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, killi ...
Alfred Nobel
The Nobel family came from Östra Nöbbelöv, a village in Skåne, hence the family name.
The first member of the family was Petrus Olai Nobelius, who married Wendela Rudbeck, daughter of th ...
Amadeus Mozart
They left for Munich and Mannheim, from where, after an extended stay, they went to Paris, where Amadeus played for six months.
During this trip, Mozart's mother fell ill and died. The entire stay in Paris was not one of the suc ...
Gaius Julius Caesar
It is not certain whether Caesar, in the last moments of his life, uttered the words "Et tu, Brute?”
According to Svetonius and Plutarch, Caesar remained silent and only covered his head with a toga when he saw his friend Brutus among the assassins.