• Thumbnail for Thomas Harriot
    Thomas Harriot (/ˈhæriət/; c. 1560 – 2 July 1621), also spelled Harriott, Hariot or Heriot, was an English astronomer, mathematician, ethnographer and...
    35 KB (3,856 words) - 17:19, 13 September 2024
  • Harriot may refer to: Elizabeth (Harriot) Wilson (1762–1786), figure in the folklore of southeastern Pennsylvania, hanged for murdering her children Harriot...
    943 bytes (156 words) - 19:07, 1 August 2019
  • Thumbnail for The School of Night
    scientists Christopher Marlowe, George Chapman, Matthew Roydon and Thomas Harriot. There is no firm evidence that all of these men were known to each...
    10 KB (1,125 words) - 07:43, 23 January 2024
  • and courtier Sir Walter Raleigh, he and Manteo assisted the scientist Thomas Harriot with the job of deciphering and learning the Carolina Algonquian language...
    10 KB (1,137 words) - 02:07, 9 August 2024
  • Christopher Marlowe, Edmund Spenser, Thomas Lodge, and George Chapman. Roydon fell in with Marlowe, and he, Thomas Harriot, and William Warner are mentioned...
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  • Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex Elizabeth I of England Erasmus Habermehl Thomas Harriot Tadeáš Hájek Nicholas Hilliard Joris Hoefnagel Rudolf II, Holy Roman...
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  • early 17th century by Thomas Harriot, lost for many years, and finally published in facsimile form in 2009 in the book Thomas Harriot's Doctrine of Triangular...
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  • Thumbnail for Thomas Roe
    location of the fabled El Dorado, that was represented in the map of Thomas Harriot in 1596. However, he failed then, and in two subsequent expeditions...
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  • Thumbnail for Sunspot
    first observed telescopically in December 1610 by English astronomer Thomas Harriot. His observations were recorded in his notebooks and were followed in...
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  • Thumbnail for Galileo Galilei
    person to observe the Moon through a telescope (English mathematician Thomas Harriot had done so four months before but only saw a "strange spottednesse")...
    130 KB (15,838 words) - 03:19, 14 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Roanoke Colony
    Arthur Barlowe was in command of the other. There are indications that Thomas Harriot and John White may have participated in the voyage, but no records survive...
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  • 2009. Retrieved June 11, 2007. "Welcome to Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences". Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences. East Carolina University...
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  • Thumbnail for Henry Percy, 9th Earl of Northumberland
    and fencing. He regularly met scholars whom he patronised, including Thomas Harriot, Walter Warner and Robert Hues, who were known as the "Earl of Northumberland's...
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  • Thumbnail for Christopher Marlowe
    given by Thomas Kyd after his imprisonment and possible torture (see above); Kyd and Baines connect Marlowe with mathematician Thomas Harriot's and Sir...
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  • Albert Einstein, on Émilie du Châtelet and Mary Somerville, and on Thomas Harriot. In the 1970s, Arianrhod left her honours program in mathematics to...
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  • Resolvendas (The Analytical Arts Applied to Solving Algebraic Equations) by Thomas Harriot, published posthumously in 1631. The text states "Signum majoritatis...
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  • restricted access to the exotic newcomers. He assigned the scientist Thomas Harriot the job of deciphering and learning the Carolina Algonquian language...
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  • Thumbnail for Stereographic projection
    for philosophers and mathematicians alike). In the late 16th century, Thomas Harriot proved that the stereographic projection is conformal; however, this...
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  • Thumbnail for Syon Park
    Charles Fowler, was the first to be built out of cast iron. In 1609, Thomas Harriot was working at Syon when he made the first ever use of the newly invented...
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  • Thumbnail for Syon House
    Northumberland (1564–1632) since when it has remained in his family. In 1609, Thomas Harriot was working at Syon when he made the first ever use of the newly invented...
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  • Thumbnail for Theodor de Bry
    Theodorus de Bry and his sons published a new, illustrated edition of Thomas Harriot's A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia about the...
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  • Thumbnail for Thomas Cavendish
    colonize America. Cavendish also studied navigation under the direction of Thomas Harriot at Raleigh's Durham House in Westminster. In 1585, Cavendish was appointed...
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  • Thomas Harriot (c. 1560 – 1621); Harriot achieved this on 26 July 1609: over four months before Galileo. 1610: Sunspots discovered by Thomas Harriot (c...
    160 KB (16,728 words) - 19:51, 11 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Carolina Algonquian language
    restricted access to the exotic newcomers, assigning the brilliant scientist Thomas Harriot the job of deciphering and learning the Carolina Algonquian language...
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  • Thumbnail for François Viète
    returned to London, Tarporley became one of the trusted friends of Thomas Harriot. Apart from Catherine de Parthenay, Viète's other notable students were:...
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  • Thumbnail for Close-packing of equal spheres
    problem of close-packing of spheres was first mathematically analyzed by Thomas Harriot around 1587, after a question on piling cannonballs on ships was posed...
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    scarcity of sufficiently powerful telescopes. Several astronomers, such as Thomas Harriot, Joseph Gaultier de la Vatelle, Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc, and...
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  • Thumbnail for Manitou
    Manitou was widely used during early European contact. In 1585, when Thomas Harriot recorded the first glossary of an Algonquian language, Roanoke (Pamlico)...
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  • number system was studied in Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries by Thomas Harriot, Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz, and Gottfried Leibniz. However, systems...
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  • Thumbnail for Harriot (crater)
    midpoint that is closest to Harriot. Harriot B lies within Harriot itself. Harriot W and X lie to the northwest of Harriot, and Harriot A, a highly eroded crater...
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