Biography

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

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Antonio Vivaldi
It is assumed that Vivaldi composed about 500 instrumental concertos.
about 350 concertos for one solo instrument and strings about 40 concertos for two solo instruments ...
Tadeusz Kosciuszko
Upon his return to Poland, which had been partitioned by Russia, Austria, and Prussia three years earlier, he found no employment in the army (the Polish army at the time was reduced to 10,000 soldiers).
He had no property (his brother ran the family farm), which was an obstacle to his marriage plans linked to Ludwika Sosnowska, daughter of Lithuanian Field Hetman Jozef Sylvester Sosnowski.
Sting
Sting's relative came from Warsaw.
In an interview, Sting mentioned that his uncle Stanislaw emigrated to the UK, settled in Newcastle, ...
Homer
He was an itinerant poet and reciter.
He transmitted his epic poems orally, reciting them to anyone who would listen.  In his poems he ext ...
Napoleon Bonaparte
At the age of 27, he married the widowed aristocrat Josephine de Beauharnais (she was the mistress of many influential politicians after her husband's death).
After marrying Josephine, Buonaparte changed his name, giving it a French spelling and pronunciation ...
Sting
Sting - Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner - was born on October 2, 1951, in Wallsend, Northumberland County, England.
Abraham Lincoln
His favorite song was an American chant written by Daniel Emmett, “Dixie.”
Perversely, the song was regarded as a kind of Confederate anthem, gaining popularity during the vote for Southern secession in 1860.
Gaius Julius Caesar
On April 6, 46 BC, a final clash between the Pompeians and the Caesarians took place at Tapsus (Ras Dimas) in Tunisia.
Caesar's 10 legions were led by Scipio's 10 legions supported by 2500 units of Numidian cavalry and ...
Amadeus Mozart
In 1783, he premiered the Great Mass in C minor KV 427.
In 1786, he received an invitation to Prague, where the production of "The Marriage of Figaro" was to take place.
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 ...