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  1. Wilhelm Schickard (22 April 1592 – 24 October 1635) was a German professor of Hebrew and astronomy who became famous in the second part of the 20th century after Franz Hammer, a biographer (along with Max Caspar) of Johannes Kepler, claimed that the drawings of a calculating clock, predating the public release of Pascal's calculator by twenty ...

  2. Wilhelm Schickard (born April 22, 1592, Herrenberg, Württemberg—died Oct. 24, 1635, Tübingen) was a German astronomer, mathematician, and cartographer. In 1623, he invented one of the first calculating machines.

  3. Apr 22, 2012 · Wilhelm Schickard was a German astronomer who invented a calculating machine long before Pascal. He worked on astronomy, mathematics and surveying.

  4. Nov 13, 2023 · When we hear the name Wilhelm Schickard today, it may not immediately ring a bell. But this renaissance mans legacy lives on in calculators, maps, astronomical charts and linguistic textbooks across the globe.

  5. Mar 27, 2024 · In 1623, over 200 years before the first programmable computers, a little-known German professor named Wilhelm Schickard invented the world‘s first calculating machine. This miraculous device could automatically add, subtract, multiply, and divide, ushering in a new era of mechanized calculation.

  6. Apr 16, 2024 · Wilhelm Schickard was one of the most reputable scientists of Germany of his time. The opinions for this universal genius from his contemporaries are—the best astronomer in Germany after Kepler’s death (Bernegger), the foremost Hebraist after the death of the elder Buxtorf (Grotius), one of the great geniuses of the century (Peiresc ...

  7. Calculating Clock, the earliest known calculator, built in 1623 by the German astronomer and mathematician Wilhelm Schickard. He described it in a letter to his friend the astronomer Johannes Kepler, and in 1624 he wrote again to explain that a machine that he had commissioned to be built for.

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