Date | Item |
560 BC | Pythagorus born |
530 BC | Pythagorus founded school of philosophy in |
480 BC | Pythagorus died |
460 BC | Hippocrates born |
384 BC | Aristotle born (his philosophy governed thinking for almost 2000 years ) |
370 BC | Hippocrates died |
367 BC | Aristotle joined Plato’s Academy |
347 BC | Plato died |
322 BC | Aristotle died |
287 BC | Archimedes born (buoyancy, digits of pi, grains of sand that would fill the universe) |
276 BC | Eratosthenes born |
248 BC | Date(?) Eratosthenes first accurately measured the circumference of the earth, by determining that there was a difference of 7 1/4 degree between |
212 BC | Archimedes died |
194 BC | Eratosthenes died |
190 BC | Hipparchus born |
120 BC | Hipparchus died. |
3 BC | Jesus born (date?) |
33 AD | Jesus died (date?) |
70 AD | Romans arrive in |
100 | Ptolemy born, codified the epicycles in to explain motions of stars and planets. |
150 | Approximate publication of Almagest by Ptolemy. Became the astronomy text for the next 1500 years. |
170 | Ptolemy died |
280 | Romans depart |
859 | Al-Karaouine founded in |
875 | Bridge across River Cam built |
936 | Abu al-Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas Al-Zahrawi born, father of modern surgery. |
1013 | Abu al-Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas Al-Zahrawi died. |
1066 | The |
1086 | Doomsday survey compiled, the first great census of the land |
1087 | William I dies, William Rufus becomes king of |
1088 | |
1135 | Convent of St Radegund founded (eventually the site of |
1200 | |
1205 | Theodoric Borgognoni born, leading medieval surgeon, pioneer of antiseptic |
1209 | |
1231 | Henry III issued 3 writs to promote security and privileges of scholars with respect to the town. One writ gave chancellor and masters the power to act as a legal corporation. |
1284 | Peterhouse founded |
1296 | Theodoric Borgognoni died. |
1317 | Kings Hall founded by Edwards II |
1318 | |
1324 | Michaelhouse founded |
1326 | |
1337 | Kings Hall refounded by Edwards III |
1347 | Pembroke founded |
1349 | The Black Death, bubonic plague kills half the population of some towns |
1374 | John of Dunwich is chancellor of |
1381 | Townsmen attack university (town vs. gown) |
1401 | Thomas Arundel, Archbishop of |
1417 | Council of |
1433 | Pope Eugenius IV issued a bull made |
1436 | Gutenberg invented the printing press. |
1473 | Copernicus born in |
1491 | Copernicus enters |
1496 | Copernicus goes to |
1499 | Bubonic plague in |
1500 | Copernicus observes his first lunar eclipse and made observations |
1502 | John Fisher is 1st Lady Margaret Professor of divinity. |
1506 | Erasmus first came to |
1509 | King Henry VIII, Tudor |
1511 | |
1514 | Andreas Vesalius born, founder of modern anatomy. |
1516 | Erasmus, Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity at |
1517 | Start of reformation by Luther, he nails his 95 theses to thedoor of the |
1520 | Printing began at |
1521 | Fire destroys much of |
1527 | John Dee born |
1530 | Great Gate built, part of Kings Hall, added to Trinity |
| Bookseller Sygar Nicholson was convicted of holding “protestant opinions” and heretical books which were burned “ |
1534 | Anglican Church founded |
1535 | John Fisher hung for denying royal supremacy |
1543 | Copernicus died |
1545 | John Dee gets Bachelors from |
1546 | Trinity founded by Henry VIII (combined Michaelhouse and Kings Hall) |
| John Dee is one of the original Fellows of Trinity |
| Tycho Brahe born |
1547 | King Edward VI, Tudor |
1548 | Emmanuel college founded with chapel defiantly facing north, rather than east. |
1551 | William Bill Master of Trinity |
| Flu Epidemic |
1553 | Queen Mary I, Tudor |
1556 | Commission set up to seek out heresy, search made of college rooms, stationers’ premises and private houses for heretical books. |
1558 | Queen Elizabeth I, Tudor |
1564 | Shakespeare born |
| Christopher Marlowe born in |
| John Calvin died |
| Trinity accounts for ¼ of |
| Andreas Vesalius died |
1566 | Thomas Gresham founded the Royal Exchange |
1567 | Chapel Built |
1571 | Johannes Kepler born |
1577 | Sir Francis Drake leaves to circumnavigate the globe (returns 1580) |
1580 | Christopher Marlowe attends |
1583 | John Dee leaves Trinity for |
1584 | Cambridge Univ Press founded |
1587 | Christopher Marlowe is awarded MA from |
1588 | Spanish Armada attacks but is defeated by |
| Isaac Beeckman born, early contributor to the idea of “atomism” |
1591 | Trinity College Dublin founded. |
1593 | Thomas Nevile is Master of Trinity |
| Christopher Marlowe disappears (dies????) |
1596 | Sidney Sussex college founded with chapel defiantly facing north, rather than east. |
| Rene Descartes born |
1601 | Tycho Brahe died |
1603 | King James I |
1607 | |
1608 | John Dee died |
1609 | Kepler published Astronomia Nova (The New Astronomy) |
1616 | Shakespeare died |
1620 | Mayflower crosses |
1625 | John Milton enters Christ’s college |
| King Charles I |
1627 | John Harvard enters Emmanuel college |
| Robert Boyle born, |
1630 | Johannes Kepler died |
1633 | June 22 Galileo before inquisition for asserting the earth revolves around the sun |
1637 | Isaac Beeckman died. |
1642 | December 25th, |
| Galileo died |
| English Civil War (Parliamentarians vs. Royalists) |
1650 | Rene Descartes died. |
1654 | Louis XIV crowned king of |
1660 | King Charles II restored to the throne |
| RSL founded, initial group includes Christopher Wren, Robert Boyle, John Wilkins, Sir Robert Moray, William Brouncker |
| Geoffrey Spence master of Elyon |
1661 | |
1662 | John Pearson Master of Trinity |
| William Viscount Brouncker president of RSL |
1663 | Henry Lucas is first Lucasian Professor of Mathematics |
| June 22, The Holy Office in |
1664 | The Great Plague in |
| |
1665 | |
| Apple fell on |
| |
1666 | Great |
1667 | |
1669 | |
1672 | |
1673 | Isaac Barrow is Master of Trinity |
1675 | Royal Observatory at |
1676 | |
1677 | Isaac Barrow died |
| Sir Joseph Williamson president of RSL |
1678 | |
| |
1679 | Uncharacteristically, |
1680 | Sir Christopher Wren president of RSL |
1682 | |
| Sir John Hoskins president of RSL |
1683 | John Montagu, Master of Trinity |
| Sir Cyril Wyche president of RSL |
1684 | Samuel Pepys president of RSL |
| Infamous gathering of three RSL members Robert Hooke, Edmond Halley, Christopher Wren to discuss the inverse-square law governing the motions of planets. |
1685 | King James II |
1686 | John, Earl of Carbery president of RSL |
| William Whiston entered |
1687 | Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica published by |
1689 | Thomas, Earl of Pembroke president of RSL |
| King William III and Mary II |
1690 | Sir Robert Southwell president of RSL |
1691 | William Whiston elected Fellow at Clare |
| Robert Boyle died. |
1693 | |
1695 | Nevile’s court completed at Trinity |
| Trinity Library by Sir Christopher Wren built |
| Charles Montagu president of RSL |
1696 | |
1698 | John, Lord Somers president of RSL |
1700 | Richard Bently is Master of Trinity |
| Robert Bernoulli born |
1701 | |
1702 | William Whiston is 3rd Lucasian Professor of Mathematics |
| Chair of chemistry endowed by university |
1703 | |
1705 | |
1707 | Leonhard Pual Euler born. |
1714 | King George I |
| Board of Longitude established by parliament, offered a prize of 20,000 pounds to anyone who could determine longitude at sea to within ½ degree |
1726 | Geologist James Hutton born |
1727 | March, |
| |
| Sir Hans Sloane president of RSL |
1728 | Chair of geology endowed by John Woodward |
1730 | Cambridge Senate House built |
1735 | John Harrison made clock able to be used for longitude determination at sea |
1737 | Luigi Galvani born (he of the “frog leg twitch” fame) |
1738 | John Wesley founds the Methodist movement |
1741 | Marin Folkes president of RSL |
1742 | Robert Smith Master of Trinity |
1745 | |
| Alessandro Volta born. |
1747 | Math Tripos |
1749 | “ |
| Pierre-Simon, marquis de Laplace born. |
1750 | Thomas Postlethwaite Master of Trinity |
| Charles Huggins dies in 1750, |
| Start of Industrial Revolution (?) |
1752 | George, Earl of Macclesfield president of RSL |
| William Whiston died |
| |
1756 | War between |
1760 | James Watt unveils steam engine |
1762 | Botanical garden founded on |
| Cambridge Chronicle founded (Tory leaning) |
1763 | John Harrison wins £20,000 for a chronometer reliable enough to calculate longitude at sea |
1764 | James, Earl of Morton president of RSL |
1767 | James Hargreaves’s spinning Jenny automated the production of light cotton yarn |
1768 | James Burrow president of RSL |
1769 | William “Strata” Smith Born |
| Start (?) of industrial revolution in |
1772 | Sir John Pringle president of RSL |
1775 | Mathematical exams given called “Tripos” |
| Start of American Revolution |
| André-Marie Ampère born. |
1776 | Decl. of independence, signatories include |
| April 1, Sophie Germain is born (died June 27, 1831) |
1777 | Hans Christian Ørsted born. |
1778 | Sir Joseph Banks became president of RSL |
1782 | Robert Bernoulli died. |
1783 | Man’s first flight, the Montgolfier brothers send a servant up in a hot air balloon (?) |
| Leonhard Euler died |
1785 | Statutes printed |
| |
| James Hutton shows John Playfair the angular unconformity at Siccar Point in |
1787 | French revolution begins. Lasts 22 years with climax in 1789. |
1788 | Steam engines fully operable |
| James Hutton published “Theory of the Earth” with the construct that the past operated under present processes (uniformitarianism) with gradual, infinitesimal changes. |
| Petty Cury, |
1789 | George Simon Ohm born. |
1791 | Delambre and Mechain begin to survey the |
1793 | Napoleonic wars (in three phases 1793-1802, 1806-1814, 1815) |
1797 | James Hutton died |
| Geologist Charles Lyell born |
1798 | Luigi Galvani died. |
1799 | Henry Brougham at RSL |
1800 | Early part of 1800s the industrial revolution occurs in |
1803 | First steam powered locomotive built by Richard Trevithick |
1804 | Napolean takes the throne |
1805 | Byron Enters Trinity |
1807 | Trading of slaves abolished |
| |
1806 | Augustus de Morgan born |
1811 | Charles Babbage enters |
1812 | Charles Babbage begins work on calculating machine (earliest computer) and difference engine |
1813 | The East India Company lost its monopoly of trade with |
1815 | |
| The Hundred Days War |
| William “Strata” Smith published geologic map of |
1816 | Examination for civil law appeared at |
| Sophie Germain won |
| June 22, Edward Groves born (died ???) |
1820 | William Hyde Wollaston president of RSL |
| Sir Humphry Davy president of RSL |
| Dr. Gideon Mantell discovers giant dinosaur tooth in the Cuckfield quarry in southern |
| Cambridge Apostles founded, initially called the Cambridge Conversazione Society |
1821 | Arthur Caley born |
1822 | Cambridge Observatory built west of |
| Luis Pasteur born. |
| Gregor Johann Mendel born. |
1823 | Augustus de Morgan enters Trinity |
1824 | Classical tripos first offered |
| William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin born. |
| Portland Cement developed by Joseph Aspdin |
1825 | New Court Built at Trinity |
1827 | 1st cricket matches at |
| Davies Gilbert president of RSL |
| Alessandro Volta died. |
| Pierre-Simon, marquis de Laplace died. |
1828 | Offices of University Librarian & Protobibliothecarius merged |
| Charles Babbage becomes the Lucasian Professor. |
1829 | Thomas Chriton born (died ???) |
| First boat race between |
1830 | H.R.H Duke of |
| Beginning of the railway age |
| Geologist Charles Lyell published Principles of Geology |
1831 | James Clerk Maxwell born |
| June 27, Sophie Germain dies (born April 1, 1776) |
| December 27, |
| December 27, Robin Louis Baack is born (died ???) |
| Faraday’s electrical current |
1833 | Robin Louis Baack publishes first book |
| Factory owners obliged to provide schooling for workers aged 9 to 13 (two hours per day) |
1834 | Edward Groves becomes a colleague of Robin Louis Baack |
| October 15th, Robin Louis Baack is knighted, becomes Sir Robin Louis Baack |
| October 16th, |
| Slavery abolished in |
| Workhouses created by the poor law act |
1836 | André-Marie Ampère died. |
1837 | The pillory abolished as punishment |
1838 | Arthur Cayley enters Trinity |
| Joshua Alwyne Compton president of RSL |
| Edwin Abbott Abbott born (Flatland) |
1839 | The Electric Telegraph devised by Charles Wheatstone |
| Photography invented (simultaneously by Daguerre in |
| William “Strata” Smith died |
1840 | Edward Groves disassociates from Sir Robin Louis Baack, falls from academic heights to lowly “shepherd” status |
1841 | Edward VII born (eldest son of Queen |
1842 | Arthur Cayley graduated Senior Wrangler |
| Cambridge Mathematical Journal 1st published, edited by Duncan Gregory |
1843 | Theological tripos offered |
| The Morse Code introduced to improve the electric telegraph |
1844 | Working hours of children (aged 8 to 13) reduced to 6½ hours per day |
| New Botanical Garden opened, moved from |
1845 | Potato crop fails (1845 to 1849), famine in |
| Arthur Cayley becomes a fellow of Trinity |
1846 | First practical sewing machine patented by Elias Howe |
1848 | William Parsons president of RSL |
1849 | George Stokes is 13th Lucasian Professor |
1850 | 441 matriculations in |
| Royal Commission established to reform universities |
| Telegraph cable laid across the |
1851 | Natural Science Tripos |
| Foucault Pendulum demonstration proves earth’s rotation |
| Hans Christian Ørsted died. |
| George Simon Ohm died. |
1852 | Botanical garden converted to site to house science buildings |
1854 | John, Lord Wrottesley president of RSL |
| Cigarettes introduced into the |
1856 | Joseph |
| |
1857 | Edwin Abbott Abbott enters |
1858 | Sir Benjamin Collins president of RSL |
| First transatlantic telegraph cable laid |
| Max Planck born. |
1859 | Origin of Species published by |
1861 | Alfred North Whitehead born |
| Fellows first allowed to marry, though it was not common |
1862 | American Civil War begins, ends 1865 |
| Edwin Abbott Abbott becomes fellow of |
1863 | Arthur Cayley appointed to Sadlerian Professor of Pure Mathematics at |
| The Lottie Sleigh, a ship carrying dynamite, blew up in the Mersey shattering many |
1865 | American Civil War ends |
| Edwin Abbott (Flatland) becomes headmaster of the City of London School |
1866 | Augustus de Morgan co-founds London Mathematical Society |
1867 | Marie Skłodowska-Curie born. |
1868 | Phillipa Garrett Fawcett born |
| Public hanging abolished |
1869 | Girton woman’s college founded, led by Miss Davies |
| Charles Thomson Rees Wilson Born (cloud chamber) |
| Suez Canal opened, a shorter route to |
1870 | William Cavendish endows lab (£8,450.) |
| The use of stocks as a punishment is abandoned |
1871 | James Maxwell returns to Trinity as professor of physics |
| Earnst Rutherford born |
| Augustus de Morgan died |
| Students can first attend University without passing a test in religion but morning and evening prayers for Church of England still offered in college chapels. |
| Newnham woman’s coll. Founded, headed by Miss Anne Jemima Clough |
1873 | Maxwell published magnetic & electrical work |
1874 | Cavendish Lab open, established on site of old Botanical Garden ( |
1875 | Newnham Hall built |
| Geologist Charles Lyell died |
1876 | Microphone invented |
| JJ Thompson admitted to Trinity as student (£75/year scholar ship, ½ went to his coach) |
| Education act, universal elementary education introduced |
1877 | Godfrey Harold Hardy born |
1878 | In 1878 the Newton Library books and his NPM were transferred to |
| Internal-combustion engine developed by Nikolaus Otto |
1879 | James Maxwell died |
| Einstein born |
| Daniel Gregory born, March 23. |
| Lord Raleigh is Cav prof |
| Thomas Edison inv light bulb |
| Alfred North Whitehead took entrance exam for Trinity, won scholarship |
| Sir |
| Teachers Training Syndicate established at |
1880 | Alfred North Whitehead enters Trinity |
| Edward Groves begins teaching at |
| School attendance made compulsory up to the age of 10 |
| Most towns use Greenwich Mean |
1881 | 1st speed of light experiment by Mickelson & Morley |
1882 | General Board of Faculties established for |
| First women examined at |
| |
| Selwyn opened, one of the first public hostela |
| Robert Hutchings Goddard born |
1883 | Alfred North Whitehead took math tripos (placed 4th Wrangler) |
1884 | Lord Rayleigh Resigns as Cav Professor |
| JJ Thompson becomes Cav prof |
| Flatland is published by Edwin Abbott Abbott. |
| |
| Gregor Johann Mendel died. |
1885 | July 4, |
| Two houses for married fellows built near |
| Hughs Hall established, initially the Woman’s |
| Niels Henrik David Bohr born. |
1887 | Miss Agnata Ramsey, student of Girton, was awarded marks above the Senior Classic but didn’t get official recognition. |
1888 | Kodak introduces the box camera, photography available to the masses |
1890? | A number of attempts were made to provide cheap non-collegiate hostels catering for poorer students, disappeared by 1900. |
| Philippa Garrett Fawcett, female student at |
| Four-wheel automobile produced by Benz |
1892 | Daniel and Clive enter |
| Fitzwilliam House opened at |
| Sinaii palimpsest of the old testament discovered |
1894 | Earnst Rutherford comes to |
| CTR Wilson makes cloud chamber |
| Wireless telegraphy invented in |
1895 | |
| Arthur Caley died |
| Luis Pasteur died. |
| Roetgen discovers xray in |
1896 | “A Body at Rest” begins |
| Becquerel accidentally discovered radioactivity. |
| Godfrey Harold Hardy enters Trinity (he was a frail boy that many kids picked on in his earlier years), he was assigned coach RR Webb who was more interested in tricks to pass the exams than learning math. |
| January 4 – André Masson, French artist born (d. 1987) |
| January 12 – H.L. Smith takes the first X-ray photograph. |
| January 14 – Martin Niemöller, German theologian and pacifist born (d. 1984) |
| January 18 – The X-ray machine is exhibited for the first time. |
| February 1 – The opera La bohème premieres ( |
| February 14 – Arthur Milne born (d. 1950), British space physicist. |
| February 18 – André Breton, French writer born (d. 1966) |
| March 29 – Wilhelm Ackermann born (d. 1962), mathematician. |
| April 6 – Opening ceremonies of the 1896 Summer Olympics, the first modern Olympic Games. |
| May 8 – Against Warwickshire, Yorkshire sets a still-standing |
| June 12 – J.T. Hearne sets a record for the earliest date of taking 100 wickets. It is qualed by Charlie Parker in 1931. |
| June 15 - ? Earthquake and tsunami in |
| July 9 – William Jennings Bryan delivers his Cross of gold speech. |
| August 16 – Skookum Jim Mason, George Carmack and Dawson Charlie discover gold in the |
| August 27 – The shortest war in the world – 9.02 – 9.40 between |
| September 18 – Hippolyte Fizeau died (b. 1819), physicist. |
| December 10 – Alfred Nobel, died, inventor of dynamite Nobel Prize (b. 1833) |
1897 | JJ Thompson discovered electron (foundation of modern physics, the beginning of the massive transformation) |
1898 | Hardy placed as 4th Wrangler in tripos |
1899 | Lytton Strachey, Leonard Woolf and Thoby Stephen meet as under-graduates at Trinity and form the nucleus of what was to become known as the Bloomsbury Group. |
| Boer War begins, lasts 3 years |
1900 | Hardy elected Fellow at Trinity |
1901 | First transatlantic wireless message, Guglielmo Marconi |
1902 | Education Act passed by Parliament (subsidized secondary education) |
1903 | First successful flight by a powered aeroplane, Orville and Wilbur Wright |
1904 | Charles Rolls and Henry Royce start making cars |
1906 | JJ gets Nobel |
| Henry Jackson is the Regius Professor of Greek |
1907 | Jawaharlal Nehru, Prime Minister of India 1947-1964, enters Trinity |
| William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin died |
1908 | |
| Ford starts mass production of his Model T |
1909 | Labor Exchanges Act passed by Parliament (groundwork for national health insurance) |
| First flight across the |
| Last Senior Wrangler classed at |
1910 | 1,191 matriculations in |
| Edward VII died |
1911 | |
1912 | Lawrence Bragg discoveredXRD |
| The Titanic sank on its maiden voyage, many died. |
| Public telephone service introduced in the |
| Werner von Braun born |
1913 | Bohr’s theory of atom |
1914 | WWI (2,470 members of |
| Jonas Salk born, developer of polio vaccine |
1917 | Worldwide flu epidemic |
| Cinema films (silent) are a popular form of entertainment |
1918 | The vote given to educated women over 30 |
| Richard Phillips Feynman born. |
1919 | JJ Thompson retires as Cav Prof |
| |
| First state support financially due to impacts of WWI and loss of fees from veteran students. |
1920 | |
1921 | E gets Nobel Prize for QM |
| PhD degree introduced |
1922 | Radio broadcasting starts (British Broadcasting Company, funded by radio manufacturers) |
1928 | Women given equal voting rights with men in |
1929 | The Wall Street Crash, October 29th, Black Tuesday, the stock market collapsed |
1932 | Atom split for 1st time, occurs in Cavendish Lab |
1934 | Marie Skłodowska-Curie died. |
1935 | Nicolas Bourbaki society “born” in |
1937 | |
1939 | WWII Starts, lasts until 1945 |
1940 | JJ Thompson dies |
1943 | |
1945 | A-bomb test |
| Robert Hutchings Goddard died. |
1947 | Women can become full members of the University |
| Alfred North Whitehead died |
| Godfrey Harold Hardy died |
| Max Planck died |
1948 | Phillipa Garrett Fawcett died |
1953 | Crick & Watson discover structure of DNA |
1954 | Newhall women’s college founded |
1955 | Einstein died |
1960 | Churchill women’s college founded |
1962 | Niels Henrik David Bohr died. |
1963 | John F Kennedy assassinated in |
1970 | Prior to this date gowns were required to be worn on the streets after dark by all junior members of the university. |
1969 | Man lands on the moon |
1974 | Cavendish Lab relocates to new place in |
1977 | Robinson women’s college founded, |
| Werner von Braun died |
1983 | Meter redefined as not the length of |
1988 | Richard Phillips Feynman died. |
Gem from GK Chesterton
"A dead thing can go with the stream, but only a living thing can go against it."
From The Everlasting Man
From The Everlasting Man
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Project BOTLOS!!
Big Ol' Time Line O' Science
Last Update: 1/26/09 with contributions from Letters from Lausanne and Rocket Scientist.
In order to get a sense for the arc of history for writing my novel, I decided to make a timeline of significant people and events (mostly scientific, but not exclusively). I'm sure there are existing time lines available that are far more complete (and accurate?!) but it was a wonderful exercise for me to build my own. My goal was to appreciate the historic back drop of Cambridge University of the late 1800s. But as I continued to read and research, the timeline project grew.
And now I'd like to enlist your help to put some meat on these bones. The timeline is very heavy in European science, heavy in physics, especially around the late 19th century. It also has more holes than Swiss cheese. I invite you to submit items of that have significant scientific implications and corrections too. I won't even mention the tremendous Bonus Point potential here (oops, I just mentioned it!). Discussions around historical figures and events are more than welcome. Comment here, or, if you're feeling fiesty, head over to the BOTLOS Boxing Ring for some more debate about the history of science. I keep a full stock of metaphoric rotten vegetables at the boxing ring to hurl at one another.
Some items on this timeline are fictional and specific to my novel. I'm including them here to help me keep things straight.
Labels:
BOTLOS,
History,
History of Science,
Science
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Completely unrelated, did you know I was descended from William the Conqueror and, since his descendant married a descendant of the Anglo-Saxon Kings, I'm descended from Alfred the Great, too.
ReplyDeleteI'm going to need a chunk of time to go through this so, um, not tonight.
No offense to anybody named "Alfred", but that just doesn't sound like a "great" historical figure. Kinda like "Filmore the Fantastic" or "Timmy the Terrific". No offense either to the Filmore's or Timmy's of the world.
ReplyDeleteAnybody have thoughts on when the industrial revolution began? I realize that it's not as if there is a discrete moment in time when some Governor said, "Hey! I got a swell idea. Today I'm starting an industrial revolution." But since it is a bit fuzzy, there seems to be some good discussion lurking.
Other
Did you mean Edwards II and Edwards III or Edward II and Edward III.
ReplyDeleteThis entry: King Henry VIII, Tudor - was that when he was born? Ditto kings/queens that followed? Or is it when they took the throne?
Why mention the Mayflower but not the earlier efforts like the ill-fated Roanoke and the establishment of Jamestown in 1607?
You might include when Charles I was beheaded (or that he was).
Which climax of the French Revolution did you mean? The King and Queen were put to death in 1793. Reign of Terror 1793-1794. Napoleon took the throne in 1804.
Why is the birth of Edward, son of Victoria, noted, but nothing on Victoria's ascension (or the three Georges before her). Also, no mention of End of American Revolutionary War or its beginnings as a nation in 1783.
Overall, your scientists are heavy into the physics side of things. I'll suggest a list of inportant people that you missed like Descartes, Pasteur, Fleming, Salk, etc.
Alfred the Great, first "King of the English". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_the_Great
ReplyDelete(I can't believe you dabble in English history and don't know this. For shame!)
People I would have included but you didn't:
ReplyDeleteHippocrates (ca. 460 BC – ca. 370 BC)
Abu al-Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas Al-Zahrawi (936 - 1013)
Theodoric Borgognoni (1205-1296)
Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564)
Isaac Beeckman (1588-1637)
Descartes (1596-1650)
Robert Boyle (1627-1691)
Daniel Bernoulli (1700-1782)(and father and sibs)
Leonhard Paul Euler (1707-1783)
Luigi Galvani (1737-1798)
Count Alessandro Volta (1745-1827)
Pierre-Simon, marquis de Laplace (1749-1827)
André-Marie Ampère (1775-1836)
Hans Christian Ørsted (1777-1851)
Georg Simon Ohm (1789-1854)
Louis Pasteur (1822-1895)
Gregor Johann Mendel (1822-1884)
William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin (1824-1907)
Max Planck (1858-1947)
Marie Skłodowska-Curie (1867-1934)
Robert Hutchings Goddard (1882-1945)
Niels Henrik David Bohr (1885-1962)
Wernher von Braun (1912-1977)
Jonas Salk (1914-1995)
Richard Phillips Feynman (1918-1988)
There's more, of course, but this should help.
The answer to all of the "Why did/didn't you include..." questions is the same. When I went to the grocery store of history, I was looking for a few snacks and didn't walk down every isle.
ReplyDeleteThe answer to all of the "Did you mean..." questions is also probably the same. Much of this has been kluged over the last 6 years and frankly I don't know/remember what I meant by much of this.
Thanks for filling in some blanks. I'll be adding these to the BOTLOS. Also, I moved the discussion items over to the BOTLOS Boxing Ring, which in no way should imply that battles must occur there. It just as easily could've been called the BOTLOS cafe or gathering, but I was looking for an alliterative name.
The list is certainly heavy in physics because the novel centers on the Cavendish Lab at Cambridge, which was primarily concerned with physics. I'd like to add other disciplines though.
The problem with making my comments on the other list is that I went back and forth from your list and what I was recommending adding to make sure I didn't duplicate your stuff. It will be more difficult to do so on a separate article.
ReplyDeleteThe people have spoken! Comments are open here or in the BOTLOS Boxing Ring. Thanks a truckload for the suggestions above. I'll get them in the time line. Lady Blog Fodder pulls through and goes big!
ReplyDeleteIndustrial revolution... I vaguely remember (i.e. "just skimmed the wikipedia article") two of them, the first one starting in the middle-to-late 18th century with weaving machines (or spinning, not too sure, maybe both) which led to the first uprisings of workers jobless due to new technology, the original luddites (rather ruthlessly quelled by the Empire, I am afraid), which more or less seamlessly went over to the second one in the late 19th century, when steam power and steel manufacture really took off.
ReplyDeleteBut I don't think there is a definite point (or even several) in history where you count point to and say: This is where it all started.