
























































| Chinesename | 浙江省 |
|---|---|
| Pinyin | Zhèjiāng Shěng |
| Englishname | Zhejiang Province |
| Name | Zhejiang |
| Localtranscription1 | Wu Romanization: Tsek Kaon Sang |
| Abbreviation | 浙 |
| Abbrevpinyin | Zhè, Wu: Tsek |
| Isoabbrev | 33 |
| Map | China Zhejiang.svg |
| Originofname | Old name of Qiantang River |
| Administrationtype | Province |
| Capital | Hangzhou |
| Largestcity | Hangzhou |
| Secretary | Zhao Hongzhu |
| Governor | Xia Baolong |
| Area km2 | 101800 |
| Arearank | 25th |
| Latitude | 27° 09' to 31° 11' N |
| Longitude | 118° 02' to 122° 57' E |
| Popyear | 2010 |
| Pop | 54,426,891 |
| Poprank | 10th |
| Popdensity km2 | 495 |
| Popdensityrank | 8th |
| Gdpyear | 2010 |
| Gdp | 2.72 trillion ($US402 billion) |
| Gdprank | 4th |
| Gdppercapita | 44,335 ($US6,490) |
| Gdppercapitarank | 4th |
| Hdiyear | 2008 |
| Hdi | 0.841 |
| Hdirank | 5th |
| Hdicat | high |
| Nationalities | Han: 99.2% She: 0.4% |
| Dialects | Wu |
| Prefectures | 11 |
| Counties | 90 |
| Townships | 1570 |
| Website | http://www.zj.gov.cn }} |
Zhejiang borders Jiangsu province and Shanghai municipality to the north, Anhui province to the northwest, Jiangxi province to the west, and Fujian province to the south; to the east is the East China Sea, beyond which lie the Ryukyu Islands of Japan.
Throughout the Qin Dynasty (221 to 206 BC) and Han Dynasty (206 BC to 220 AD), Zhejiang was under the control of the unified Chinese state, though it was a frontier area at best, and southern Zhejiang was not under anything more than nominal control, it being still inhabited by Yue with their own political and social structures. Near the end of the Han Dynasty Zhejiang was home to minor warlords Yan Baihu and Wang Lang, who fell in turn to Sun Ce and Sun Quan, who eventually established the Kingdom of Wu (222–280), one of the Three Kingdoms.
From the fourth century onwards, China began to be invaded from the north by nomadic peoples, who conquered areas of North China and established the Sixteen Kingdoms and the Northern Dynasties. As a result, massive numbers of refugees arrived from the north and poured into South China, which hosted the refugee Eastern Jin Dynasty and Southern Dynasties; this accelerated the sinicization of South China, including Zhejiang.
The Sui Dynasty reestablished unity and built the Grand Canal of China, which linked Hangzhou to the North China Plain, providing Zhejiang with a vital link to the centers of Chinese civilization. The Tang Dynasty (618–907) presided over a golden age of China. Zhejiang was, at this time, part of the Jiangnandong Circuit, and there began to appear references to its prosperity. Later on, as the Tang Dynasty disintegrated, Zhejiang constituted most of the territory of the regional kingdom of Wuyue.
The Northern Song Dynasty re-established unity in around 960. Under the Song Dynasty, the prosperity of South China began to overtake North China. After the north was lost to the Jurchens in 1127, Zhejiang had its heyday: the modern provincial capital, Hangzhou, was the capital of the Han Chinese Southern Song Dynasty which held on to South China. Renowned for its prosperity and beauty, it may have been the largest city in the world at the time. Ever since then all the way to the present day, north Zhejiang has, together with neighbouring south Jiangsu, been synonymous with luxury and opulence in Chinese culture. Mongol conquest and the establishment of the Yuan Dynasty in 1279 ended Hangzhou's political clout, though Hangzhou continued to prosper; Marco Polo visited the city, which he called "Kinsay", and called the "finest and noblest city" in the world".
The Zhejiang province, particularly the Longquan district, became renowned during the Southern Song and Yuan dynasty for its production of a particular celadon (greenware) ceramic. The Southern Song Longquan celadon is characterized by a thick unctuous glaze of a particular bluish-green tint over an otherwise undecorated light-grey porcellaneous body that is delicately potted. Yuan Longquan celadons feature a thinner, greener glaze on increasingly larger vessels with decoration and shapes derived from Middle Eastern ceramic and metalwares. These were produced in large quantities for the Chinese export trade to Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and in the Ming, Europe. Ming wares are mainly noted for a decrease in quality and it is in this period that the Longquan kilns declined, to be eventually replaced in popularity and ceramic production by the kilns of Jingdezhen, in neighboring Jiangxi province.
The Ming Dynasty which drove out the Mongols in 1368 were the first to establish Zhejiang Province, and the borders of the province have since changed little. With the invasion of Western capitalism, Zhejiang became the most important bridge between Shanghai, the national economic center, and wealthy Southern China. Following the Doolittle Raid during World War II, most of the B-25 American crews that came down in China eventually made it to safety with the help of Chinese civilians and soldiers. The Chinese people who helped them, however, paid dearly for sheltering the Americans. The Imperial Japanese Army began the Zhejiang-Jiangxi Campaign to intimidate the Chinese from helping downed American airmen. The Japanese killed an estimated 250,000 civilians while searching for Doolittle’s men.
After the People's Republic of China took control of Mainland China in 1949, the Republic of China government based in Taiwan continued to control the Dachen Islands off the coast of Zhejiang until 1955, even establishing a rival Zhejiang provincial government there, creating a situation similar to Fujian province today. During the Cultural Revolution (1966–76), Zhejiang was in chaos and disunity, and its economy was stagnant, especially during its high tide (1966–69). These problems were intensified by an agricultural policy favoring grain production at the expense of industrial and cash crops. Mao’s self-reliance policy, and the reduction in maritime trade cut off the lifelines of the port cities of Ningbo and Wenzhou. While Mao invested heavily in railroads in interior China, no major railroads were built to improve the poor transportation conditions in South Zhejiang.
Zhejiang has been less favored by the central government due to the lack of natural resources, a location vulnerable to potential flooding from the sea, and an economic base at the national average. Zhejiang, however, has long been an epicenter of capitalist development in China, and has been leading the nation in marketisation and the development of private enterprises. Northeast Zhejiang, as part of the Yangtze Delta, is flat, more developed, and industry oriented, where the earliest civilization in Zhejiang was found. South Zhejiang is mountainous and ill-suited for farming, and has traditionally been poor and underdeveloped. The economic reforms of Deng Xiaoping, however, have brought change to that region unparalleled across the rest of China. Driven by hard work, an entrepreneuring spirit, low labour costs, and an eye for the world market, south Zhejiang (especially cities such as Wenzhou and Yiwu) has become a major center of export. This, together with the traditional prosperity of north Zhejiang, has allowed Zhejiang to leapfrog over several other provinces and become one of the richer provinces of China.
Although against the traditional Confucian ideas, intellectuals in Zhejiang, such as Shi Ye of the Yongjia School, had been promoting commercial activities. Over the years, Zhejiang has developed a tradition of active commercial activities and entrepreneurship.
Valleys and plains are found along the coastline and rivers. The north of the province lies just south of the Yangtze Delta, and consists of plains around the cities of Hangzhou, Jiaxing, and Huzhou, where the Grand Canal of China enters from the northern border to end at Hangzhou. Another relatively flat area is found along the Qujiang River around the cities of Quzhou and Jinhua. Major rivers include the Qiangtang and Oujiang Rivers. Most rivers carve out valleys in the highlands, with plenty of rapids and other features associated with such topography. Well-known lakes include the West Lake of Hangzhou and the South Lake of Jiaxing.
There are over three thousand islands along the ragged coastline of Zhejiang. The largest, Zhoushan Island, is Mainland China's third largest island, after Hainan and Chongming. There are also many bays with Hangzhou Bay being the largest.
Zhejiang has a humid subtropical climate with four distinct seasons. Spring starts in March and is rainy with changeable weather. Summer, from June to September is long, hot and humid. Fall is generally dry, warm and sunny. Winters are short but cold except in the far south. Average annual temperature is around 15 to 19°C, average January temperature is around 2 to 8°C, and average July temperature is around 27 to 30°C. Annual precipitation is about 1000 to 1900 mm. There is plenty of rainfall in early summer, and by late summer Zhejiang is directly threatened by typhoons forming in the Pacific.
| ! Map | ! # | ! Name | ! Hanzi | ! Hanyu Pinyin | ! Administrative Seat |
| Colspan=5 align=center | |||||
| 1 | Hangzhou | 杭州市 | Hángzhōu Shì | Gongshu District | |
| 2 | Ningbo | 宁波市 | Níngbō Shì | Haishu District | |
| 3 | Huzhou | 湖州市 | Húzhōu Shì | Wuxing District | |
| 4 | Jiaxing | 嘉兴市 | Jiāxīng Shì | Nanhu District | |
| 5 | Jinhua | 金华市 | Jīnhuá Shì | Wucheng District | |
| 6 | 丽水市 | Líshuǐ Shì | Liandu District | ||
| 7 | Quzhou | 衢州市 | Qúzhōu Shì | Kecheng District | |
| 8 | Shaoxing | 绍兴市 | Shàoxīng Shì | Yuecheng District | |
| 9 | 台州市 | Tāizhōu Shì | Jiaojiang District | ||
| 10 | Wenzhou | 温州市 | Wēnzhōu Shì | Lucheng District | |
| 11 | Zhoushan | 舟山市 | Zhōushān Shì | Dinghai District |
The eleven prefecture-level divisions of Zhejiang are subdivided into 90 county-level divisions (32 districts, 22 county-level cities, 35 counties, and one autonomous county). Those are in turn divided into 1570 township-level divisions (761 towns, 505 townships, 14 ethnic townships, and 290 subdistricts).
See List of administrative divisions of Zhejiang for a complete list of county-level divisions.
The Governor of Zhejiang is the highest ranking official in the People's Government of Zhejiang. However, in the province's dual party-government governing system, the Governor has less power than the Zhejiang Communist Party of China Provincial Committee Secretary, colloquially termed the "Zhejiang CPC Party Chief". Zhejiang was home to Chiang Kai-shek and many high ranking officials in the Nationalist Party, who fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing the Civil War. Zhejiang has since become the forefront of China’s tense relations with Taiwan.
Ningbo, Wenzhou, Taizhou and Zhoushan are important commercial ports. The Hangzhou Bay Bridge between Haiyan County and Cixi, is the longest sea-crossing bridge in the world.
Zhejiang's manufacturing is centered upon electromechanical industries, textiles, chemical industries, food, and construction materials. In recent years Zhejiang has followed its own development model, dubbed the "Zhejiang model", which is based on prioritizing and encouraging entrepreneurship, an emphasis on small businesses responsive to the whims of the market, large public investments into infrastructure, and the production of low cost goods in bulk for both domestic consumption and export. As a result, Zhejiang has made itself one of the richest provinces, and the "Zhejiang spirit" has become something of a legend within China. However, some economists are now worrying that this model is not sustainable, in that it is inefficient and places unreasonable demands on raw materials and public utilities, and also a dead end, in that the myriad small businesses of Zhejiang producing cheap goods in bulk are unable to move to more sophisticated or technologically-oriented industries. The economic heart of Zhejiang is moving from Hangzhou-surrounded North Zhejiang southeastward to more complex combinations of several strong municipalities. The per capita disposable income of urbanites in Zhejiang reached 24,611 yuan (US$3,603) in 2009, an annual real growth of 8.3%. The per capita pure income of rural residents stood at 10,007 yuan (US$1,465), a real growth of 8.1% year-on-year. Its nominal GDP for 2010 was 2.72 trillion yuan (US$402 billion) with a per capita of 44,335 yuan (US$6,490). In 2009, Zhejiang's primary, secondary, and tertiary industries were worth 116.2 billion yuan (US$17 billion), 1.1843 trillion yuan (US$173.4 billion), and 982.7 billion yuan (US$143.9 billion) respectively.
Zhejiang is the first province of China which has no counties in the poverty-county list of the central government. Zhejiang has become one of the most marketised and richest provinces in China. Compared to many other Chinese provinces, the development in different regions in Zhejiang is more balanced. While the countyside still lags behind, in 2006, the per capita disposable incomes for eleven major cities in Zhejiang were all ranked among the top 30 in Chinese cities.
Major cities:
Throughout history there has been numerous ''lingua franca'' in the area to allow for better communication. The dialects spoken in Hangzhou, Shaoxing and Ningbo have taken on this role historically. Since the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, Mandarin, which is not mutually intelligible with any local dialects, has been promoted as the standard language of communication in all of China. As a result, most of the population now have a good grasp on speaking and comprehending Mandarin and can code-switch when necessary, while the majority of the population educated since 1978 can speak Mandarin flawlessly. Urban areas tend to be more fluent in Mandarin than rural areas. Nevertheless, a Zhejiang accent is detectable in almost everyone from the area communicating in Mandarin, and the home dialect of any native resident remains an important part of the everyday lives and cultural identity of most Zhejiang residents.
Category:Provinces of the People's Republic of China Category:Yangtze River Delta
ace:Zhejiang ar:جيجيانغ zh-min-nan:Chiat-kang-séng be:Чжэцзян bo:ཀྲེ་ཅང་ཞིང་ཆེན། bg:Джъдзян ca:Zhejiang cs:Če-ťiang cy:Zhejiang da:Zhejiang de:Zhejiang et:Zhejiang el:Ζεγιάγκ es:Zhejiang eo:Ĝeĝjango eu:Zhejiang fa:چجیانگ fr:Zhejiang ga:Zhejiang gv:Zhejiang gan:浙江 hak:Tset-kông-sén ka:ჯეძიანი ko:저장 성 hi:झेज़ियांग id:Zhejiang it:Zhejiang he:ג'ג'יאנג pam:Zhejiang sw:Zhejiang lt:Džedziangas hu:Csöcsiang mr:च-च्यांग ms:Zhejiang nl:Zhejiang ja:浙江省 no:Zhejiang nn:Zhejiang pnb:زیزیانگ pl:Zhejiang pt:Zhejiang ro:Zhejiang ru:Чжэцзян sah:Чжэцзян simple:Zhejiang sk:Če-ťiang sr:Џеђанг fi:Zhejiang sv:Zhejiang tl:Zhejiang th:มณฑลเจ้อเจียง tr:Zhejiang uk:Чжецзян ug:جېجياڭ ئۆلكىسى vi:Chiết Giang war:Zhejiang wuu:浙江省 zh-yue:浙江 zh:浙江省This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
| name | J. R. Smith |
|---|---|
| height ft | 6 | height_in 6 | weight_lb 220 |
| position | Guard |
| birth date | September 09, 1985 |
| birth place | Freehold, New Jersey |
| high school | Lakewood HS (Lakewood Township, New Jersey)St. Benedict's Preparatory School (Newark, New Jersey) |
| nationality | American |
| draft round | 1 |
| draft pick | 18 |
| draft team | New Orleans Hornets |
| draft year | 2004 |
| career start | 2004 |
| years1 | – | team1 New Orleans Hornets |
| years2 | – | team2 Denver Nuggets |
| profile | jr_smith }} |
Earl Smith III, known as J. R. Smith (born September 9, 1985, in Freehold, New Jersey), is an American professional basketball player who last played with the Denver Nuggets of the National Basketball Association.
Smith participated in the Sprite Rising Stars Slam Dunk Competition in 2005, finishing behind Amar'e Stoudemire and the eventual winner, Josh Smith.
On July 13, 2006, the Hornets formally traded Smith and forward–center P.J. Brown to the Chicago Bulls for center Tyson Chandler. On July 19, 2006, Smith was traded again, this time to the Denver Nuggets for guard Howard Eisley and two 2007 second-round draft picks.
On December 16, 2006, Smith was involved in the Knicks–Nuggets brawl. He was suspended for 10 games.
On February 20, 2007, Smith injured his left knee which required knee surgery. He missed 3–4 weeks.
On October 13, 2007, Smith was involved in an incident at a Denver nightclub. The Nuggets suspended him for the first three regular season games of the NBA 2007-2008 season for his role in the incident.
On July 25, 2008, Smith was added to the Team USA Basketball select team to help the senior team prepare for the Olympics.
On February 10, 2009, Smith was chosen to replace the injured Rudy Gay in the 2009 Slam Dunk Contest.
On April 13, 2009, Smith scored a career-high 45 points on 13-of-22 shooting, as part of a 118-98 home win over the Sacramento Kings. He made a franchise-record 11 three-pointers during the game, which was one shy of tying the NBA record.
For the 2009-10 season, Smith and teammate Chauncey Billups agreed to change jersey numbers. Smith changed to the No. 5 jersey, in order to accommodate Billups' request to wear No. 1, the same number Billups wore with the Detroit Pistons. On December 23, Smith scored 41 points against the Atlanta Hawks which included 10 three-pointers, one shy of his record. Smith shot 10-of-17 from 3-point range.
He finished the 2009-10 season with the second most three-pointers in the league off the bench.
Smith had a better showing in his second trip to the playoffs during a first-round matchup with the Los Angeles Lakers. He played 27.0 minutes, averaging 18.3 points per game on 53.5% shooting. He also had a 31.8% three-point shooting percentage. Although the Nuggets were swept in the first round, Lakers shooting guard Kobe Bryant said in a postgame interview that, "J. R. is a good young player. He was a lot to handle."
On his third trip to the playoffs, Smith averaged 14.9 points per game on 45.4% shooting, providing scoring off the bench. He helped the Nuggets make the Western Conference Finals before losing to the Lakers.
On June 9, 2007, Smith and two passengers were injured in a car accident on Stagecoach Road in Millstone Township, New Jersey, when the SUV he was driving collided with another car. Smith and a passenger, Andre Bell, were ejected from the vehicle at around 5:30 p.m. Smith's vehicle appeared to have gone through a stop sign and collided with the other car. Smith was taken to Jersey Shore University Hospital. Bell suffered serious head wounds before being pronounced dead on the night of June 11. Neither Smith nor the second passenger suffered life-threatening injuries. Smith and Bell were not wearing seatbelts at the time. In October 2008, a grand jury in Monmouth County, New Jersey declined to indict Smith on a vehicular manslaughter charge stemming from the accident.
On June 30, 2009, Smith pled guilty to the June 2007 accident. Smith was initially sentenced to 90 days in a Monmouth County (N.J.) jail, but 60 of those days were suspended, on the condition that he completes 500 hours of community service. On July 31, 2009, the Denver Post reported that Smith was released from jail after serving only 24 days of his sentence.
On August 28, 2009, Smith was suspended 7 games for the 2009-2010 NBA season because of his guilty plea in the 2007 reckless driving incident. The NBA also cited his poor driving record as grounds for the suspension. Smith's driving record included five suspensions in eight months, but was "in good standing" at the time of the crash in New Jersey. He was required to pay restoration fees and fines. Smith totaled 27 points against his record from April 2005 to January 2006, including eight violations on seven different days. Five citations were for speeding. Since the accident, he has received two more speeding tickets and three license suspensions in New Jersey.
On August 5, 2009 Smith closed his twitter account (jr_smith1) because he was accused of writing in a way that reflected the Bloods gang, specifically replacing his c's with k's.
Smith has a younger brother named Chris who is currently a starter for the University of Louisville. They regularly practice together, especially over the summer.
Category:1985 births Category:Living people Category:African American basketball players Category:American basketball players Category:Basketball players from New Jersey Category:Denver Nuggets players Category:McDonald's High School All-Americans Category:National Basketball Association high school draftees Category:New Orleans Hornets draft picks Category:New Orleans Hornets players Category:Parade High School All-Americans (boys' basketball) Category:People from Monmouth County, New Jersey Category:Shooting guards
de:Earl Smith III. es:J.R. Smith fr:J. R. Smith hr:J. R. Smith it:J.R. Smith he:ג'יי אר סמית' ja:J.R.スミス pl:J.R. Smith zh:J·R·史密斯This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
The following is a list of significant men and women known for being the father, mother, or considered the founders mostly in Western socities in a field, listed by category. In most non-science fields, the title of being the "father" is debatable.
| Subject | Father/Mother | Reason |
| Miniature wargaming | H.G. Wells | |
| Shigeru Miyamoto | Creator of many successful Nintendo franchises | |
| PlayStation | Ken Kutaragi | |
| Role-playing game | Gary Gygax | Creator of ''Dungeons & Dragons'' |
| Stealth game | Hideo Kojima | |
| Video game | Ralph H. Baer | Inventor of the video game console |
| Wargaming | Charles S. Roberts |
| Subject | Father/Mother | Reason | ||||
| Aerial warfare | Oswald Boelcke | The first to formalize rules of air fighting, which he presented as the Dicta Boelcke, also credited as being the first pilot to shoot down an aircraft. | ||||
| Atomic bomb | Robert OppenheimerLeó SzilárdEnrico Fermi | |||||
| Blitzkrieg | Heinz Guderian | |||||
| Edward Teller | ||||||
| Atomic submarine and "nuclear navy" | Hyman G. Rickover | |||||
| Fourth Generation Warfare | William S. Lind | |||||
| Jean-Baptiste Colbert | Built on the fleet of France inherited from Cardinal Richelieu. | |||||
| Naval Special Warfare | Phil H. Bucklew | US Naval Officer and First Commanding Officer of Navy SEAL Team One | ||||
| Naval tactical studies | Paul Hoste | Jesuit Professor of Mathematics at the Royal College of the Marine in Toulon; wrote ''L'Art des Armées Navales'' (1697) | ||||
| Luftwaffe and Luftstreitkräfte | Oswald Boelcke | |||||
| The Soviet Union's Hydrogen Bomb | Andrei Sakharov | |||||
| William C. Lee | First commander of the parachute school at Fort Benning, Georgia. | |||||
| Kazimierz Pułaski | Brigadier-general and commander of the cavalry of the Continental Army (1770s). | |||||
| United States Navy |
| Subject
|
Father/Mother
|
! Reason
|
[[American Football">John Barry (naval officer) |
|
|
| Subject | Father/Mother | ! Reason | |||||
| [[American Football | Walter Camp | ||||||
| Godfather, created the New York Cosmos soccer team and imported a number of well known international footballers to the team in an attempt to bring interest to soccer in the US. | |||||||
| Angling | Izaak Walton | author of ''The Compleat Angler'' | |||||
| Association football | Ebenezer Cobb Morley | ||||||
| Charles William Miller | |||||||
| Baseball | |||||||
| Basketball | James Naismith | ||||||
| Scot Breithaupt | |||||||
| Eugen Sandow | |||||||
| Harold Zinkin | Called so by Arnold Schwarzenegger during a press statement on his passing in 2004. Inventor of the modern exercise machines. | ||||||
| James Figg | |||||||
| James J. Corbett | |||||||
| Jim Downing | Built a racecar a season before it became the basis of a new lightweight prototype class in . | ||||||
| Canadian rodeo | coined the rodeo term ''Stampede'' and was world's first rodeo producer/rodeo stock contractor/rodeo champion in 1902 | ||||||
| Wally Parks | |||||||
| Don Garlits | Considered to be one of the innovators of drag racing safety. | ||||||
| Eddie Hill | Regarded as the Forefather of Drag Racing. | ||||||
| Kunimitsu Takahashi | |||||||
| Modern figure skating | Jackson Haines | ||||||
| The Football Association | Ebenezer Cobb Morley | Founder | |||||
| rowspan="2" | James Richardson Spensley | ||||||
| William Garbutt | Laying the foundations of skilled coaching in Italian football | ||||||
| Freestyle BMX | Bob Haro | ||||||
| Freestyle Motocross | Mike Metzger | Godfather | |||||
| Funny Car | Dick Landy | ||||||
| Frank Chirkinian | Personally responsible for much of the production conventions of modern golf broadcasting. | ||||||
| rowspan="2" | Credited for introducing baseball in Japan | ||||||
| Hiroshi Hiraoka | Credited for establishing the first baseball team | ||||||
| Jogging | Jim Fixx | Founding father | |||||
| Karting | Art Ingels | Developed the world's first kart (1956) | |||||
| Lacrosse | William George Beers | Codified the sport | |||||
| Mixed martial arts | Bruce Lee | Called so by Dana White, president of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. For his experimentation into other styles and invention of Jeet Kune Do. | |||||
| American motocross | Edison Dye | Introduced motorcross to American riders | |||||
| NASCAR | Bill France, Sr. | Foundation of the sanctioning body for stock car racing | |||||
| Road racing in the United States | Cameron Argetsinger | ||||||
| Rugby union | A. G. Guillemard | William Webb Ellis |
|
(William Webb Ellis)"WHO WITH A FINE DISREGARD FOR THE RULES OF FOOTBALL AS PLAYED IN HIS TIME FIRST TOOK THE BALL IN HIS ARMS AND RAN WITH IT THUS ORIGINATING THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURE OF THE RUGBY GAME" | |||
| Italo Santelli | |||||||
| Florida Skateboarding | Bruce Walker | ||||||
| East Coast Skateboarding | Vinny Raffa | ||||||
| Skip Engblom | |||||||
| Tony Hawk | |||||||
| Snowboard | Jake Burton | ||||||
| Supercross | Mike Goodwin | Organized the first supercross race | |||||
| Modern surfing | Duke Kahanamoku |
| Subject | Father/Mother | Reason | |
| Aerodynamics (modern) | Sir George Cayley | Founding father of modern Aerodynamics. The first to identify the four aerodynamic forces of flight—weight, Lift (force) | |
| [[Architecture | Imhotep | Built the first pyramid | |
| Astronautics | Konstantin Tsiolkovsky | Robert H. GoddardHermann Oberth | |
| Aviation | Book: ''Prodromo alla Arte Maestra'' (1670). First to describe the geometry and physics of a flying vessel. | ||
| Thomas Tompion | |||
| Clinical trials | James Lind | Conducted the first Scientific control | |
| [[Computing | Charles Babbage | Inventor of the Analytical Engine which was never constructed in his lifetime. | |
| Cybernetics | Norbert Wiener | ||
| William F. Moran | Founder of the American Bladesmith Society | ||
| Bob Loveless | Founder of the Knifemakers' Guild | ||
| Photography |
| Subject | Father/Mother | Reason | ||||||
| Air conditioning | Willis Carrier | |||||||
| Chronograph | ||||||||
| Compact Disc | ||||||||
| Compiler | Grace Hopper | |||||||
| Konrad Zuse | Invented world's first functional program-controlled computer. | |||||||
| Alan Turing | Was a secret code breaker during WWII and invented the Turing machine (1936). | |||||||
| John von Neumann | Became "intrigued" with Turing's universal machine and later emphasised the importance of the stored-program concept for electronic computing (1945), including the possibility of allowing the machine to modify its own program in useful ways while running. | |||||||
| Invented the digital computer in the 1930s | ||||||||
| Computer Program | Ada Lovelace | Recognized by historians as the writer of the world's first computer program which was for the Charles Babbage Analytical Engine, but was never complete within either her or his lifetime. | ||||||
| Ekranoplan | Rostislav Alexeev | |||||||
| Helicopter | Igor Sikorsky | Invented the first successful helicopter, upon which further designs were based. | ||||||
| Internet | Vint CerfBob Kahn | |||||||
| Instant noodle | Momofuku Ando | Inventor of the instant noodle, also founder of Nissin Foods to produce and market them. | ||||||
| Japanese television | Kenjiro Takayanagi | |||||||
| Jet engine | Frank Whittle | |||||||
| Karaoke | Daisuke Inoue | Inventor of the machine as a means of allowing people to sing without the need of a live back-up. | ||||||
| Laser | Charles Hard Townes | |||||||
| Lightning prediction system | Alexander Stepanovich Popov | The first lightning prediction system, the Lightning detector, was invented in 1894 by Alexander Stepanovich Popov. | ||||||
| Marine chronometer | John Harrison | |||||||
| Microprocessor | Marcian Hoff Masatoshi Shima | |||||||
| Mobile phone | He is the main brainchild of hand-held phone and with the help of Motorola team he developed the first handset in 1973 weighing in at two kilos. | |||||||
| Vinod Dham | The original Pentium (P5) was developed by a team of engineers, including John H. Crawford, chief architect of the original 386, and Donald Alpert, who managed the architectural team. Dror Avnon managed the design of the FPU. Dham was general manager of the P5 group. Some media sources have called him the "father of the Pentium". | |||||||
| Chuck Peddle | Developed the 6502 microprocessor, the KIM-1 and the Commodore PET | |||||||
| Programmable logic controller | Dick Morley | |||||||
| Radio | Alexander Stepanovich Popov Lee De Forest Guglielmo Marconi Jagdish Chandra Bose Nikola Tesla | |||||||
| Radio (Radio broadcasting) | Reginald Fessenden David Sarnoff | Fessenden is credited as the first to broadcast radio signals on Christmas Eve, 1906. Sarnoff proposed a chain of radio stations to Marconi's associates in 1915. | ||||||
| Radio (FM radio) | Edwin H. Armstrong | Obtained the first Federal Communications Commission (FCC) license to operate an FM station in Alpine, New Jersey at approximately 50 megahertz (1939) | ||||||
| Radiotelephony | Reginald Fessenden | |||||||
| SGML | Charles Goldfarb | |||||||
| Telephone | Antonio Meucci | Alexander Graham Bell | See Invention of the telephone | |||||
| Television | Philo T. Farnsworth |
|
Vladimir Zworykin |
|
John Logie Baird | Co-Inventors of the Electronic Television. Farnsworth invented the Image dissector while Zworykin created the Iconoscope, both fully electronic forms of television. Logie Baird invented the world's first working television system, also the first electronic color television system. | ||
| Tokamak | Lev Artsimovich | |||||||
| Fazlur Khan | Invented the tube structural system and first employed it in his designs for the DeWitt-Chestnut Apartments, John Hancock Center and Sears Tower. | |||||||
| World Wide Web | Tim Berners-Lee | |||||||
| Visual Basic | Alan Cooper | |||||||
| XML | Jon Bosak |
| Subject | Father/Mother | ! Reason | |||||
| Lan Kwai Fong | Allan Zeman | Noted for turning a small square of streets in
| Subject
|
Father/Mother
|
! Reason
|
| [[Henry Ford">Central, Hong Kong |
|
| Subject | Father/Mother | ! Reason |
| [[Henry Ford | Noted for introducing a simple and affordable car for the ordinary American masses. | |
| American Interstate Highway System | Dwight D. Eisenhower | |
| Gene Berg | ||
| Hot rod | Ed Winfield | |
| RJ DeVera | Influential for popularising the import car scene in the mid-1990s. | |
| Kustom Kulture | ||
| Monster truck | ||
| Mountain bike | Gary Fisher | |
| Rotary engine | Felix Wankel | |
| Cyrus Avery | ||
| Tailfin | Harley Earl | |
| Traffic safety | William Phelps Eno | |
| Frank W. Cyr | ||
Father or mother of something Father or mother of something, List of people known as
ar:آباء العلوم fa:فهرست افراد دارای لقب پدر یا مادر در یک زمینهThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Robert Sun is the inventor of the 24 Game. He invented the math card game in the 24 . He is also the chairman, president, and chief executive of Suntex.
Sun was born in Shanghai and moved to the United States, living in Philadelphia when he was nine years old. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1970 with a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering. He currently resides in Easton, Pennsylvania.
Category:Living people Category:People from Easton, Pennsylvania
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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