Enlightenment · Europe · Technology
1671
Leibniz Designs a Calculating Machine
1671
The young German polymath Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, inspired by Pascal's arithmetic machine, designed a stepped-drum calculator capable of multiplication and division. He called it the Stepped Reckoner. Though never fully reliable in his lifetime, it introduced the mechanical principles that would drive calculating engines for the next two centuries and pointed toward the eventual dream of universal computation.