Guglielmo Marconi, Italian physicist and inventor and pioneer of wireless telegraphy. Artist: Spy

Guglielmo Marconi, Italian physicist and inventor and pioneer of wireless telegraphy. Artist: Spy

1-157-197 - Oxford Science Archive/Heritage Images

Guglielmo Marconi, Italian physicist and inventor and pioneer of wireless telegraphy. Marconi (1874-1937) discovered a way in which waves could be used to send messages from one place to another without wires or cables. Having read about Heinrich Hertz's work with electromagnetic waves, he began experiments of his own, and in 1894 successfully sounded a buzzer 9 metres away from where he stood. In 1902 Marconi sent a radio signal across the Atlantic in Morse code. Five years later, a Canadian scientist, Reginald Fessenden, transmitted a human voice by radio for the first time. Marconi's inventiveness and business skills made radio communication a practical proposition. Cartoon from Vanity Fair, London.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. Sir Leslie Matthew Ward, attributed to: British: Illustrator for Vanity Fair, artist, painter, caricaturist
Subject
  1. Guglielmo Marconi: Italian: Physicist, scientist, inventor, Nobel Prize winner

Medium
  1. Lithograph

Picture Type
  1. Caricature
  2. Portrait

Category Hierarchy

Science & Nature Technology & Innovation

People Famous People

Trade & Industry Communications

Artistic Representations Portraits

Artistic Representations Caricatures


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 3284x5327
File Size : 51,252kb


Aliases

  1. 001542
  1. 001542
  1. 0460000175
  1. 1-157-197
  1. 1157197
  1. 175

Buy a Print  

Keywords - refine your search by combining multiple keywords below.