Browsing People by name starting with B (467 records)
  • 1943 – 1977, German

    Terrorist. From a start as a student protestor in the 1960's, he became more and more alienated from contemporary German society with its capitalist institutions and ties with the United States, and co-founded the Red Army Faction, an underground terrorist group. He was captured and committed suicide.

  • 1699 – 1760, Russian

    Jewish teacher. Toward the end of his life, he created the Hassidic movement that drew upon the tradition of the Cabala and emphasized a direct, mystical, and enthusiastic communion with God. Initially the concern with spirit seemed to de-emphasize the Law, which did not necessarily sit well with the orthodox. But today, within the context of an often religiously liberal Judaism, Hassidism is considered orthodox in its degree of observance.

  • 1819 – 1850, Iranian

    Religious leader. He variously pronounced himself the forerunner of or the actual embodiment of the awaited 12th Imam of Shiite belief and was eventually executed for heresy. His sect was referred to as Babism. A follower, Baha-Allah, developed Bahaism.

  • 1760 – 1797, French

    Revolutionary. He was a Jacobin during the French Revolution, but favored an even more radical egalitarian and communist program. When his plot to seize power was uncovered, he was guillotined.

  • fl. 150, Greek

    Writer of fables. He helped popularize Aesop's fables.

  • 1875 – 1967, American

    Business author. He pioneered the use of statistics in business, economics, and the stock market, thus quantifying and advancing empirical methods. Perhaps best known for forecasting the stock market crash in 1929, he founded a business college for women as well as one for men.

  • 1483 – 1530, Mughal

    The first Mughal (Muslim) emperor of North India. He is primarily associated with conquest, but to a lesser degree with patronage of the arts, and is perhaps best remembered for the religious toleration that he fostered.

  • 1561 – 1626, Irish

    Philosopher and political figure. Bacon's philosophical writings have been widely credited with launching empiricism, induction, and indirectly, the scientific revolution. This is exaggerated. Others such as Harvey seem to have had a better grasp of rudimentary science. But Bacon was a brilliant essayist and deservedly influential. His political as opposed to philosophical career was more of an object lesson than a beacon light for values. After successfully abandoning and then prosecuting his former patron, Lord Essex, for treason against Queen Elizabeth, his previously stalled political career took off. He held many important posts under King James I including the position of Lord Chancellor, and was made a peer as Lord Verulam. However, nemesis struck, he was convicted of taking large bribes, and never regained office.

  • 1220 – 1292, English

    Philosopher, polymath, and pre-scientist. He was an early critic of the inhibiting effect of authorities on thought, and an early exponent of empiricism, logic, the experimental method in science, along with the encouragement of technology and invention. Given these attitudes, his decision at age forty-one to join the Franciscan Order was a tragic error, since the Franciscans were even less receptive to his work than other orders might have been. He was silenced, then permitted by the Papacy to write specifically for the Pope, then imprisoned by the Order for fourteen years, after which he died.

  • Indian

    Philosopher. He is said to have written The Vedanta Sutra, a key text of the Vedanta School (one of the six philosophical schools) of Hinduism. For more on Vedanta, see Sankara, Ramanuja, and Madhva.

  • 1857 – 1941, English

    Soldier and social organizer. He became well known to the British public for his celebrated defense of Mafeking in South Africa during the Boer War. After his retirement from the military, he founded the Boy Scouts and (with his sister) the Girl Guides (Girl Scouts in the U.S.). Scouting quickly became an international movement seeking to teach youths good character ("A scout is truthful.") as well as skills and a love of the outdoors.

  • 1910 – 1982, English

    Aviator. Although crippled by a flying accident that cost him his legs, he returned to the Royal Air Force to fly in the Battle of Britain when in Churchill's words, "Never was owed by so many to so few." He lost his plane in 1941 and was captured but miraculously survived the war. His career exemplified character, courage, skill, and daring.

  • 1801 – 1859, German

    Publisher. Originator of the eponymous guidebooks, his life expressed the love of travel and of foreign lands.

  • 1863 – 1944, Belgian

    Chemist. Among other inventions, he helped develop plastics, an extraordinarily useful material which poses risks for the environment and for human health. He thus illustrated the power of combining science with technology but also the inherent ambiguity of all technical advances.

  • Born 1941, American

    Singer and songwriter. Her work celebrated folk music, political protest, and the use of folk music for political protest. Among the causes she embraced were civil rights and opposition to the Vietnam War.

  • 1826 – 1877, English

    Economist and journalist. His English Constitution of 1807 helped define a Constitution which, famously, remains unwritten to this day. He was thus a major figure in the movement for constitutional government as well as lawyer, economist, and editor of The Economist magazine.

  • 1806 – 1883, American

    Labor agitator. She fought for a shorter workday and also helped found the Female Labor Reform Association among the textile mills of Lowell, Mass., a town which in her time was the center of industry in New England.

  • 1817 – 1892, Iranian

    Religious leader. He began as a follower of Bab-ed-Din (Mizra Ali Mohammed), the founder of the Babi Sect in Iran, who prophesied the coming of a new Shiite Imam but was executed as a heretic in 1850. Baha-Allah then assumed the mantle of the prophet and founded Bahaism, a new religion which states that God is unknowable, that all religions are one because they are all successive emanations of the incomprehensible truth of God, and that Jesus, Mohammed, and Bab-ed-Din were examples of such emanations.

  • Born 1938, English

    Photographer. His work expressed a fascination with fashion, beautiful women, rock and roll, celebrity, and style.

  • Born 1933, American

    Criminal lawyer. He epitomized the idea of turning a court of law into a form of theater. Although critics charged that his defense antics represented both the theater of the absurd and a travesty of the concept of justice, he prepared each case with meticulous detective work, and was often masterful in manipulating the emotions of the jury.