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Fun Trivia : Isaac Newton Encyclopedia FunTrivia

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    Isaac Newton

    Is the house where Sir Isaac Newton was born still standing? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      Yes. Woolsthorpe Manor, Newton's birthplace, became part of the National Trust in 1943, has been fully restored, and is located seven miles south of Grantham, Lincolnshire. It is said that an apple falling from the ancient, gnarled tree that stands in the front yard at Woolsthorpe, inspired Newton's work on gravity. What kind of man was Newton? Like us all, Newton had a many faceted personality. Selfish in giving credit to other academics, he was extremely generous with his half-brother, half-sisters, and their families. Cold as ice and hard as stone to his enemies, Newton was warm and caring to his friends. Newton was one of most brillant scientific minds of his or any age. In this there can be no contradiction. This quiz was based on "In the Presence of the Creator" by Gale E. Christainson and "Isaac Newton" by James Glick. Thank you for taking my quiz on Sir Issac Newton's life.

    How many years was Newton the president of the Royal Society? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      24 years. In the seventh year of Newton's Trinity fellowship, he was expected to be ordained into the Anglican church or resign his professorship. On Feb. 9, 1675, Newton went to London and petitioned King Charles II for a dispensation. While in London, Newton attended his first meeting of the Royal Society and was admitted as a member. He became president of the Royal Society in 1703 and served until his death on Mar. 27, 1727. On April 27,1675, the king granted Newton's petition, and the Lucasian professorship was no longer tied to the taking of holy orders.

    How many times was Newton married? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      Never. Newton chose to live a life of celibacy, and he never married. Fellows at Trinity took an oath of celibacy, and it was frowned upon even for a Master to marry. Newton took this oath seriously and even after leaving Trinity, there is nothing written about him, or by him, linking him with any women.

    Under whose reign was Newton honored with a knighthood? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      Queen Anne. On April 16, 1705, Queen Anne and her court traveled from the royal residence in Newmarket, to Cambridge, where she conferred twenty-three doctorates and knighted three men, one of whom was Newton.

    To what position was Newton appointed in 1696? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      Warden of the Mint. In the 1690's Charles Montague, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, took on the monumental task of withdrawing all of England's old coins from circulation and coining new money. Newton left for London in 1696 to take the position of Warden of the Mint. He became Master of the Mint in 1700. He was diligent in his work and became a justice of the peace to prosecute counterfeiters. Newton continued his work at the Mint until his death in 1727.

    When Newton was forty-seven, he sat for his first portrait. Who painted this now famous portrait of Newton? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      Sir Godfrey Kneller. Newton sat for several portraits. His first portrait was painted when Newton was forty-six by Sir Godfrey Kneller in 1689. His last portrait was painted by John Vanderbank in 1725 when Newton was eighty-two.

    Newton's great work "Philosphiae Naturalis Principa Mathematica" was published under the Royal Society's license in 1687, but who arranged and paid for its publication? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      Edmund Halley. "Principa Mathematica" was Newton's great work and contained his three Laws of Motion. It is still considered to be the most influential book written in the field of physics. Edmund Halley presented Part I of Newton's "Principa Mathematica" (which consisted of Parts I, II, and III) to the Royal Society on April 28, 1668. After presenting Part III on May 19, 1668, Halley received approval for it to be printed under the Royal Society's license. The Society was short on cash, so Halley was charged with arranging and paying for the costs of publication. "Principa Mathematica" was first published in July of 1687.

    Which one of Newton's family members died in the late spring of 1679? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      Hannah Newton Smith (his mother). Exactly what Hannah Newton Smith died of is not known. It was a contagious disease with symptoms that included blisters and a high fever. She contracted the illness while tending to her son, Benjamin Smith, at Stamford. He recovered, but she became gravely ill. Newton hurried from Cambridge, and personally attended his mother until her death in late May or early June of 1679. She was buried in Colsterworth, on June 4, 1679.

    How old was Newton when he became Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      27 years old. Isaac Barrow became Cambridge's first Lucasian Professor of Mathematics in 1664. The colleges of Cambridge closed during the plague months of 1665-1666, and Newton returned to Woolsthorpe, where he did much of his serious work on optics, light, and motion. In 1667, when he returned to Trinity, he was elected as a Trinity Fellow. He helped edit Barrow's lectures on optics for publication in 1669, but he did not tell Barrow that his own experiments proved much of Barrow's findings obsolete. (Newton had not yet made his own work known). Barrow resigned in 1669, and he recommended Newton, then twenty-seven, as his replacement. On Oct. 29, 1669 Newton became Cambridge's second Lucasian Professor of Mathematics.

    Which activity did Newton not enjoy doing as a child? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      Singing and playing a harp. Newton was always interested in how things worked. As a young boy at Woolsthorpe, Newton constructed sundials accurate within fifteen minutes. During the years he attended Kings Grammar School in Grantham, from the age of ten until sixteen, he built working models of windmills and a four feet tall working water clock. He also made the first paper kites seen around Grantham, which he enjoy setting on fire and flying at night, causing the local people to think they were comets. He also loved to draw and sketch.

    What was the occupation of Newton's father, also named Isaac, who died before Newton was born? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      Farmer. Isaac Newton was born in September of 1606. He was a prosperous yeoman farmer who owned around one hundred acres of fields, woods, pasture, and orchards. Newton died in early October, 1642, only five months after his marriage to Hannah Asycough and three months before his son's birth on Dec. 25, 1642.

    Newton was born on Christmas Day in 1642. Can you tell me where in England that he was born? Sir Isaac Newton's Life

      He was born at Woolsthorpe, near Colsterworth, Lincolnshire.. Isaac Newton was born at Woolsthorpe Manor, a modest two-story house of gray limestone, on Christmas Day, 1642. Woolsthrorpe was located near the village of Colsterworth, Lincolnshire, about seven miles south of Grantham. (The date of Newton's birth is that of the Julian calendar, as the Gregorian calendar was not adopted in England until 1672).

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