Template:Selected anniversaries/March 26: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
||1484 – William Caxton prints his translation of Aesop's Fables.
||1484 – William Caxton prints his translation of Aesop's Fables.
||1535 – Georg Tannstetter, Austrian mathematician, astronomer, and cartographer (b. 1482)
||1535 – Georg Tannstetter, Austrian mathematician, astronomer, and cartographer (b. 1482)
File:Tycho Brahe.jpg|link=Tycho Brahe (nonfiction)|1569: Astronomer [[Tycho Brahe (nonfiction)|Tycho Brahe]] uses [[Gnomon algorithm functions]] make improved astronomical observations.
|File:Tycho Brahe.jpg|link=Tycho Brahe (nonfiction)|1569: Astronomer [[Tycho Brahe (nonfiction)|Tycho Brahe]] uses [[Gnomon algorithm functions]] make improved astronomical observations.
||1656 – Nicolaas Hartsoeker, Dutch mathematician and physicist (d. 1725)
||1656 – Nicolaas Hartsoeker, Dutch mathematician and physicist (d. 1725)
||1698 – Prokop Diviš, Czech priest, scientist and inventor (d. 1765)
||1698 – Prokop Diviš, Czech priest, scientist and inventor (d. 1765)
Line 18: Line 18:
||1875 – Max Abraham, Polish-German physicist and academic (d. 1922)
||1875 – Max Abraham, Polish-German physicist and academic (d. 1922)
||1884 – Georges Imbert, French chemical engineer and inventor (d. 1950)
||1884 – Georges Imbert, French chemical engineer and inventor (d. 1950)
||Theodore Samuel Motzkin (26 March 1908 – 15 December 1970) was an Israeli-American mathematician.[1]
||1910 – Auguste Charlois, French astronomer (b. 1864)
||1910 – Auguste Charlois, French astronomer (b. 1864)
||1893 – James Bryant Conant, American chemist, academic, and diplomat, 1st United States Ambassador to West Germany (d. 1978)
||1893 – James Bryant Conant, American chemist, academic, and diplomat, 1st United States Ambassador to West Germany (d. 1978)

Revision as of 15:25, 24 July 2017