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         Lovelace Augusta Ada:     more detail
  1. Ada Augusta Lovelace. by Dorothy Stein, 2004-04-30
  2. Augusta Ada Byron, Countess of Lovelace: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Heather M. Moncrief-Mullane, 2000
  3. Lovelace, Ada Byron: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Mathematics</i> by J. William Moncrief, 2002
  4. Lovelace, Ada Byron King, Countess of: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Computer Sciences</i> by Ida M. Flynn, 2002

41. The My Hero Project - Augusta Ada Byron
Sharla D. Walker s story about Technology Hero augusta ada Byron lovelace . augusta ada Byron developed the world s first computer program while
http://myhero.com/myhero/hero.asp?hero=adabyron

42. Ada Lovelace
ada, Countess of lovelace 1815 1852. augusta ada Byron was born 10th December,1815. She was brought up by her mother following her parents separation and
http://www.hucknall-parish-church.org.uk/ada.htm
The Parish Church of St Mary Magdalene
Hucknall, Nottingham, England in the Diocese of Southwell
Ada, Countess of Lovelace
In 1834 she married Richard King who later became the Earl of Lovelace. In 1852 she died of cancer, aged 36, the same age as her father when he died and she was buried at her own request by his side here in the Byron Vault at the Parish Church of St Mary Magdalene, Hucknall, the last member of the family to be buried here. Go back to or St Mary Magdalene Homepage This page created and maintained by Richard Jackson
on behalf of the District Church Council of St Mary Magdalene.

43. Byron, Augusta Ada, Lady Lovelace (1815-1852)
Byron, augusta ada, Lady lovelace. NOBLEMAN, MATHEMATICIAN (ENGLAND). BORN 10Dec 1815, Middlesex Piccadilly Terrace (now London) DIED 27 Nov 1852,
http://www.xs4all.nl/~androom/biography/p004288.htm
if(self.location==top.location)self.location="../index.htm?biography/p004288.htm";
Byron, Augusta Ada, Lady Lovelace
NOBLEMAN, MATHEMATICIAN (ENGLAND) BORN 10 Dec 1815, Middlesex: Piccadilly Terrace (now London) - DIED 27 Nov 1852, London: Marylebone
GRAVE LOCATION Hucknall Torkard, Nottinghamshire: St. Mary Magdalens' Church
Daughter of the poet Lord Byron and his wife Annabella Milbanke. Byron left Annabella a month after Ada's birth and she would never see her father again.
At seventeen Ada met Mary Somerville, one of the few succesful female mathematicians. Her mother also took an interest in maths and had even been called Princess of Parallelograms by the poet.
In 1835 she married William, 8th Lord King, who later became Earl of Lovelace. Therefore Ada was known as Ada Lovelace since 1838.
She became involved with Charles Babbage's Analytical Machine and translated and annotated Luigi Federico Menabrea's description of it ("Notions sur la machine analytique de Charles Babbage" (1842), translated as "Elements of Charles Babbage's Analytical Machine"). The annotations were more extensive than Menabrea's description and an important addition was her analysis of how the analytical machine could be programmed to calculate Bernoulli numbers. This is why she was regarded as the first computer programmer in the twentieth century.
After the birth of her third child she suffered a mental collapse and her doctors gave her a prescription for a combination of alcohol and drugs, among them laudanum. She had hallucinations and at one time thought she was communicating with God. She managed to stop using the drugs, but then started to bet on horse races. She used Babbage to bring her money to the bookmakers to hide her gambling habit. Af the time she was dying of cancer she was in debt as well as being blackmailed.

44. Ada
augusta ada Byron was born December 10, 1825 in a house overlooking The firstletter from ada lovelace to Charles Babbage is dated January 18, 1836.
http://www.math.sfu.ca/histmath/Europe/20thCenturyAD/Ada.html
Augusta Ada Byron
Ada and her father
Ada as a child
Not much seems to be written about Ada's youth. We know her mathematical aptitude was certainly recognized and encouraged by her mother. We also know that like many other young women of her time that she enjoyed concerts, theatres, and parties. In other words she was a very well rounded individual. At the age of seventeen Ada was introduced to Mary Somerville, a mathematician whom Ada deeply admired. Mrs. Somerville encouraged Ada in her mathematical studies. It was through Mrs. Somerville that Ada met her future husband.
Marriage and children
Ada Byron was married at nineteen to a man who was eleven years her senior. This man was William Lord King who soon became the Earl of Lovelace. They enjoyed a warm and caring relationship. Lord Lovelace took a keen interest in his wife's work and was very supportive. Intellectually, Ada was superior , regardless, it created no problem in their marriage. Lord Lovelace accepted his wife's talents and took pride in her many accomplishments.
The couple settled in the country where they had two sons and a daughter. Interestingly, the daughter, following the footsteps of her mother and grandmother, showed a keen interest in mathematics to later become a famous Arabic Scholar.

45. The Ada Picture Gallery
Lady augusta ada Byron, Countess of lovelace (18151852), daughter of LordByron (the poet who spent some time in a Swiss jail in Chillon,
http://www.cs.kuleuven.ac.be/~dirk/ada-belgium/pictures.html
The Ada Picture Gallery
This page contains a lot of Ada related pictures. They are organized in three sections depending on whether the image is related to the Ada programming language, to Lady Augusta Ada Byron, or to none of these. The pictures here are only scaled down versions or extracts; the full size versions are available via links in the accompanying text. All images are claimed by their original contributor to be freely available for non-commercial use, unless mentioned otherwise. You might be interested in a little bit of history on this Ada Picture Gallery? Mini-FAQ:
  • I want to use picture XYZ in . Can I get permission?
    Not from us, as we don't "own" these pictures. As mentioned above, it should be perfectly safe to use them for non-commercial purposes, but if you want to use them in commercial projects you need to investigate further.
  • Where can I get a higher resolution or printed version of picture XYZ?
    Again, not from us. These files are all we have, and all available information about their origin is included in the caption with the picture.

46. LOVELACE, LADY AUGUSTA ADA BYRON, COUNTESS OF LOVELACE
lovelace, LADY augusta ada BYRON, COUNTESS OF lovelace. computerprogrammer (18151851). She is considered the first computer programmer.
http://www.astr.ua.edu/4000WS/LOVELACE.html
LOVELACE, LADY AUGUSTA ADA BYRON, COUNTESS OF LOVELACE
computer programmer (1815-1851) She is considered the first computer programmer. She was the daughter of Lord Byron, the English poet. One of her patrons was Sir Charles Babbage, the inventor of the first mechanical computer. She wrote the "code" to run the machine. To honor her memory, the US Navy named one of its computer languages Ada. Return to Homepage

47. Ada Home 1997-12 -- Happy Birthday Ada Lovelace
ada Home, December 10, 1997 Happy Birthday ada lovelace. (Annabella) Byron,whose husband was Lord Byron, gave birth to a daughter, augusta ada.
http://www.adahome.com/articles/1997-12/al_birthday.html
Ada Home
December 10, 1997
December 10
Happy Birthday Ada
from John McCormick
mccormick@cs.uni.edu
On December 10, 1815, Anna Isabella (Annabella) Byron, whose husband was Lord Byron, gave birth to a daughter, Augusta Ada. Ada's father was a romantic poet whose fame derived not only from his works but also from his wild and scandalous behavior. His marriage to Annabella was strained from the beginning, and Annabella left Byron just a little more than a month after Ada was born. By April of that year, Annabella and Byron signed separation papers, and Byron left England, never to return. Byron's writings show that he greatly regretted that he was unable to see his daughter. In one poem, for example, he wrote of Ada, I see thee not. I hear thee not. But none can be so rapt in thee. Byron died in Greece, at the age of 36, and one of the last things he said was, Oh my poor dear child! My dear Ada! My God, could I but have seen her! Meanwhile, Annabella, who was eventually to become a baroness in her own right, and who was herself educated as both a mathematician and a poet, carried on with Ada's upbringing and education. Annabella gave Ada her first instruction in mathematics, but it soon became clear that Ada's gift for the subject was such that it required more extensive tutoring. Ada received further training in mathematics from Augustus DeMorgan, who is today famous for one of the basic theorems of Boolean Algebra which forms the basis for modern computers. By the age of eight, Ada had also demonstrated an interest in mechanical devices and was building detailed model boats.

48. Namesakes
augusta ada Byron, Lady lovelace (18151852) - ada Programming Language.ada Byron, Lady lovelace, An Analyst and Metaphysician (abstract).
http://www.aaai.org/AITopics/html/name.html
Namesakes
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49. Augusta Ada Byron-King (Countess Of Lovelace) (1815-1852
tp (ada, Countess of lovelace) p. 5, etc. (b. 1815; augusta ada Byron became wifeof Lord King; d. 1852) GB 7729834 (body of entry ada,
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/cit/citlclovelace1.htm

Augusta Ada Byron-King (Countess of Lovelace) (1815-1852)
: Library of Congress Citations
The Little Search Engine that Could
Down to Name Citations LC Online Catalog Amazon Search Book Citations [5 Records] Author: Moore, Doris Langley-Levy, 1903- Title: Ada, Countess of Lovelace : Byron's legitimate daughter / [by] Doris Langley Moore. Published: London : J. Murray, 1977. Description: [13], 5-397 p., [12] p. of plates : ill., ports. ; 24 cm. LC Call No.: PR4382 .M6 Dewey No.: 942.07/092/4 B ISBN: 0719533848 : ¹9.50 Notes: Bibliography: p. 387-388. Includes index. Subjects: Lovelace, Ada King, Countess of, 1815-1852. Byron, George Gordon Byron, Baron, 1788-1824 Marriage. Poets, English 19th century Biography. Control No.: 78312498 //r964 Author: Stein, Dorothy. Title: Ada, a life and a legacy / Dorothy Stein. Published: Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, c1985. Description: xix, 321 p., [16] p. of plates : ill. ; 24 cm. Series: MIT Press series in the history of computing LC Call No.: QA29.L72 S74 1985 Dewey No.: 510/.92/4 B 19 ISBN: 026219242X : $19.95 Notes: Bibliography: p. [298]-313. Includes index. Subjects: Lovelace, Ada King, Countess of, 1815-1852. Mathematicians Great Britain Biography. Control No.: 85011367

50. Malaspina.com - Augusta Ada Byron-King (Countess Of Lovelace
Research bibliography, books and links to 1000 other interdisciplinary entriescompiled by Russell McNeil.
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/lovelace1.htm
Augusta Ada Byron-King (1815-1852) [Agnes Scott College]
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51. August Ada Byron Lovelace - Countess Of Lovelace
lovelace, (Countess of) Byron, augusta ada 18151852 by Jeanette Cain. The Countessof lovelace was the originator of modern computer programming,
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52. Ada Byron Lovelace
ada Byron lovelace (December 12,1815 November 27,1852). A great femalemathematician , augusta ada Byron, was brought into the world on Tuesday,
http://www.livezone.com/girltalk/AdaByron.html
Biography
Ada Byron Lovelace (December 12,1815 - November 27,1852) A great female mathematician , Augusta Ada Byron, was brought into the world on Tuesday, December 12, 1815. Her father was the popular and controversial English poet, Lord Byron and her mother was Annabella Milbanke. Their marriage was an unhappy one ending when Annabella left her husband's house taking one-month-old Ada with her. Ada's grandparents generously took her in while her mother traveled around Europe, on doctor's advice, in order to keep healthy. Her mother, Lady Byron, had always loved mathematics. She was nicknamed by Byron, the "Princess of Parallelograms." Ada's mother wanted her to be just as interested in math and so hired her old tutor, William Frend. Frend was especially good at astronomy and algebra, but would have nothing to do with imaginary or negative numbers. He believed that taking an interest in this newer mathematics would make one superstitious. Ada asked Frend questions that he didn't understand and was independently studying higher mathematics (including negative and imaginary numbers). A terrible case of measles left Ada's legs temporarily paralyzed and she was bedridden for months. She, however, did not mind her condition too much because it allowed her to pay close attention to her work without interruptions. When Ada was seventeen she was ready to "come out." This meant an introduction to the King and Queen and that she was ready for marriage. Ada loved dancing at the balls and all the people she met. At one social event she met the acclaimed professor of mathematics, Charles Babbage. Babbage had invented the "Difference Engine" which could do addition, subtraction, division and multiplication. Ada was enthralled with Babbage and his ideas.

53. Read About Ada Lovelace At WorldVillage Encyclopedia. Research Ada Lovelace And
ada lovelace. Everything you wanted to know about ada lovelace but had no cluehow to ada lovelace. augusta ada King, Countess of lovelace (December 10,
http://encyclopedia.worldvillage.com/s/b/Ada_Lovelace

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Ada Lovelace
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Ada Lovelace Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace December 10 November 27 ) is mainly known for having written a description of Charles Babbage 's early mechanical general-purpose computer, the analytical engine Contents 1 Life
2 Controversy over attribution

3 Trivia

4 See also
...
edit
Life
Ada was the only legitimate child of the poet Lord Byron and his wife, Annabella Milbanke , a cousin of Lady Caroline Lamb , with whom he had an affair that scandalized Regency London . Ada was named after Byron's half-sister Augusta Leigh , by whom he was rumoured to have fathered a child. It was Augusta who encouraged Byron to marry to avoid scandal, and he reluctantly chose Annabella. On January 16 , Annabella left Byron, taking 1-month old Ada with her. On April 21 , Byron signed the Deed of Separation and left England for good a few days later. He never saw either again. Biographies differ as to whether Ada lived with her mother: one claims that her mother dominated her life, even after marriage; another claims she never knew either parent. One source tells that Annabella was fond of mathematics and taught Ada this art at an early stage of her life. She was privately schooled in

54. Augusta Ada King, Condesa De Lovelace:
Translate this page augusta ada KING, CONDESA DE lovelace. Nació 10-12-1815 en Piccadilly Terrace,Middlesex (el actual Londres ). Murió el 29-11-1852 en Marylebone, Londres.
http://centros5.pntic.mec.es/ies.juan.de.mairena/bioada.htm
AUGUSTA ADA KING, CONDESA DE LOVELACE Nació 10-12-1815 en Piccadilly Terrace, Middlesex (el actual Londres ). Murió el 29-11-1852 en Marylebone, Londres. Matemática inglesa. Creó un programa para un prototipo de ordenador digital que había diseñado Charles Babbage. Debido a esta circunstancia Ada ha sido considerada la primera programadora de computadoras. Fue la hija del sexto Lord Byron ( el famoso poeta ) y de Annabella Milbanke Byron. Sus padres se separaron legalmente cuando ella tenía dos meses de edad. Su padre abandonó definitivamente Gran Bretaña y su hija nunca llegó a conocerlo en persona. Fue educada de forma privada por tutores y también fue autodidacta, aunque fue ayudada en sus estudios avanzados por Augustus De Morgan, el primer profesor de matemáticas de la Universidad de Londres. El 8 de Julio de 1835 se casó con William King, octavo barón de King y en 1838 adquirió el título de condesa de Lovelace.

55. Educom Review
augusta ada Byron, a contemporary of the early nineteenth century, In 1980,the US Department of Defense honored ada lovelace by naming its new
http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/review/reviewArticles/31240.html
By Elisabeth Freeman
Sequence: Volume 31, Number 2
Release Date: March/April 1996
Augusta Ada Byron, a contemporary of the early nineteenth century, was a woman ahead of her time. She died when she was only 36 and for the next hundred years she would be known as the daughter of Lord Byron the poet. Only in this century would she become known as the first "computer programmer."
Ada's parents, Lord and Lady Byron, separated when Ada was very young and she was subsequently raised by her mother. Ada was naturally curious and spent a great deal of time on her studies. Her first love was geography, but this was soon replaced with a new passion, mathematics. She started corresponding with mathematicians about problems and ideas as her studies progressed and in 1833, when Ada was 18 years old, she met the scientist Charles Babbage, inventor of the Difference Engine, at a party. Babbage invited her to visit the studio where he kept his invention and two weeks later, accompanied by her mother, she did. She was fascinated by Babbage's invention and began corresponding with Babbage regularly, learning as much as she could about his invention and ideas. Ada and Babbage would remain friends and collaborators for the rest of her life.
Babbage's Difference Engine was a machine designed to perform mathematical computations. It was the application of the method of finite differences, and was capable of storing numbers and performing additions, thus supplying a method by which tables generated by polynomials could be computed by a uniform process. Babbage's ideas for improvement of the Engine led to his second invention, the Analytical Engine - the world's first computer. He was inspired by the principle of division of labor. During a time when mathematical tables had to be laboriously computed by hand by human "computers," he saw that machine automation of these tasks, which required precision and repetition, would speed up the process and reduce errors.

56.     Lady Lovelace ~ Augusta Ada Byron
Agustus ada Byron ~ Lady lovelace Please click the thumbnails with an * in frontof the title to view a larger image. Lady lovelace. Lord Byron ~ Father
http://www.mathisradical.com/Lovelace.htm
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57. ADC - Ada Lovelace December 10, 1815 - November 27, 1852
augusta ada Byron King, Countess of lovelace. Portrait of ada lovelace ada Byronwas the daughter of a brief marriage between the Romantic poet Lord Byron
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Augusta Ada Byron King, Countess of Lovelace
da Byron was the daughter of a brief marriage between the Romantic poet Lord Byron and Anne Isabelle Milbanke, who separated from Byron just a month after Ada was born. Four months later, Byron left England forever.
Ada never met her father (who died in Greece in 1824) and was raised by her mother, Lady Byron. Her life was an apotheosis of struggle between emotion and reason, subjectivism and objectivism, poetics and mathematics, ill health and bursts of energy.
Lady Byron wished her daughter to be unlike her poetical father, and she saw to it that Ada received tutoring in mathematics and music, as disciplines to counter dangerous poetic tendencies. But Ada's complex inheritance became apparent as early as 1828, when she produced the design for a flying machine.
It was mathematics that gave her life its wings. Lady Byron and Ada moved in an elite London society, one in which gentlemen not members of the clergy or occupied with politics or the affairs of a regiment were quite likely to spend their time and fortunes pursuing botany, geology, or astronomy. In the early nineteenth century there were no "professional" scientists (indeed, the word "scientist" was only coined by William Whewell in 1836)but the participation of noblewomen in intellectual pursuits was not widely encouraged.

58. Ada Lovelace - Definition Of Ada Lovelace In Encyclopedia
augusta ada King, Countess of lovelace (December 10, 1815 November 27, 1852)is mainly known for having written a description of Charles Babbage s early
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Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace December 10 November 27 ) is mainly known for having written a description of Charles Babbage 's early mechanical general-purpose computer, the analytical engine Ada was the only legitimate child of the poet Lord Byron and his wife, Annabella Milbanke , a cousin of Lady Caroline Lamb , with whom he had an affair that scandalized Regency London . Ada was named after Byron's half-sister, Augusta Leigh , by whom he was rumoured to have fathered a child. It was Augusta who encouraged Byron to marry to avoid scandal, and he reluctantly chose Annabella. On January 16 , Annabella left Byron, taking 1-month old Ada with her. On April 21 , Byron signed the Deed of Separation and left England for good a few days later. He never saw either again. Biographies differ as to whether Ada lived with her mother: one claims that her mother dominated her life, even after marriage; another claims she never knew either parent. One source tells that Anabella was fond of mathematics and taught Ada this art at an early stage of her life. She was privately schooled in

59. IEEEVM: Ada Lovelace
ada lovelace was one of the first women to become involved in the technology Born augusta ada Gordon on 10 December 1815 in London, ada was the daughter
http://www.ieee-virtual-museum.org/collection/people.php?taid=&id=1234745&lid=1

60. Articles - Ada King, Countess Of Lovelace
for most of her married life was The Right Honourable augusta ada, Countessof lovelace. She is widely known in modern times simply as ada lovelace.
http://www.1-electric.com/articles/Ada_Lovelace
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Ada was the only legitimate child of the poet Lord Byron and his wife, Annabella Milbanke half-sister Augusta Leigh , by whom he was rumoured to have fathered a child. It was Augusta who encouraged Byron to marry to avoid scandal, and he reluctantly chose Annabella. On January 16 , Annabella left Byron, taking 1-month old Ada with her. On April 21 , Byron signed the Deed of Separation and left England for good a few days later. He never saw either again.
Biographies differ as to whether Ada lived with her mother: one claims that her mother dominated her life, even after marriage; another claims she never knew either parent. One source tells that Annabella was fond of mathematics and taught Ada this art at an early stage of her life. She was privately schooled in mathematics and science ; one of her tutors was Augustus De Morgan . An active member of London society, she was a member of the Bluestockings in her youth.
Her husband was William King, 8th Baron King, later 1st Earl of Lovelace whom she married in 1835. They had three children; Byron born

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