May 30, 2011

Timeline of Sir Isaac Newton's Life

December 25, 1642: ·Birth of Isaac Newton in Woolsthorpe, England
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1654: ·Newton enrolls in the Grantham Grammar School

1661: ·Newton enrolls in Trinity College, Cambridge.

1665: ·Newton receives his bachelor of arts from Trinity College

1666: ·Fire in London. Outbreak of plague drives Newton to retire to his mother's home in Woolsthorpe. Newton conducts prism experiments, discovers spectrum of light; works out his system of "fluxions," precursor of modern calculus; begins to consider the idea of gravity.

1669: ·Newton appointed Lucasian Chair of Mathematics at Trinity, a position he will hold for the next thirty-four years.

January 11, 1672: ·Newton elected to the Royal Society

February 1672: ·Newton's paper on optics and his prism experiments sent to the Society.

1670s: ·Newton works on the mathematics of gravitation in his home in Cambridge.

November 1684: ·Newton completes his calculations on gravity and shares them with Halley, who urges him to publish.

February 1685: ·Newton sends a brief treatise, Propositiones de Motu, to the Royal Society, outlining his findings.

April 1686: ·Newton presents the first book of the Principia to the Royal Society.

September 1687: ·Publication of the complete Principia

1689: ·Newton elected as Cambridge's representative to Parliament.

1693: ·Newton's "Black Year." He is plagued by depression and insomnia, and apparently suffers a nervous breakdown in September.

1695: ·Newton appointed warden of the Mint, to oversee the implementation of a new currency. He leaves Cambridge and moves to London.

1699: ·Newton named master of the Mint.
 Elected President of the Royal Society.

1704: ·Publication of Opticks; beginning of feud with Leibniz.

1705: ·Newton knighted by Queen Anne.

1712: ·Royal Society commission, under Newton's direction, investigates the competing claims of Leibniz and Newton to having developed calculus, and decides in favor of Newton.

1713: ·Second edition of the Principia published.

1726: ·Third edition of the Principia published; all reference to Leibniz has been removed.

March 20, 1727: ·Death of Sir Isaac Newton, in London.

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