Enlightenment · Europe · Science
1716
Leibniz Dies in Hanover
November 14, 1716
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, co-inventor of calculus, philosopher of possible worlds, and tireless correspondent with half of learned Europe, died alone in Hanover. No one from the court attended his funeral. Newton, his great rival, said nothing publicly. The man who had invented binary arithmetic and dreamed of a universal language was buried without ceremony.