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Lovelace, Augusta Ada
King, countess of Encyclopædia
Britannica Article |
née Lady Byron
born December 10, 1815, Piccadilly Terrace,
Middlesex [now in London], England died November 29, 1852, Marylebone,
London
Augusta Ada King,
countess of Lovelace, from a portrait by A.E. Chalon, c.
1838. Courtesy of The
Computer Museum History Center
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English mathematician, an associate of Charles
Babbage, for whose prototype of a digital computer
she created a program. She has been called the first computer
programmer.
She was the daughter of the 6th Lord Byron
(the famous poet) and Annabella Milbanke Byron, who legally
separated two months after her birth. Her father then left Britain
forever, and his daughter never knew him personally. She was
educated privately by tutors and then self-educated but was helped
in her advanced studies by Augustus De Morgan, the first professor
of mathematics at the University of London. On July 8, 1835, she
married William King, 8th Baron King; and, when he was created an
earl in 1838, she became countess of Lovelace.
She became interested in Babbage's machines
as early as 1833 and, most notably, in 1843 came to translate and
annotate an article written by the Italian mathematician and
engineer Luigi Federico Menabrea, “Notions sur la machine analytique
de Charles Babbage” (1842; “Elements of Charles Babbage's Analytical
Machine”). Her detailed and elaborate annotations (especially her
description of how the proposed Analytical Engine could be programmed to
compute Bernoulli numbers) were excellent; “the Analytical Engine,”
she said, “weaves algebraic patterns, just as the
Jacquard-loom weaves flowers and leaves.”
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