List of child prodigies: Difference between revisions
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*Asad Ullah Qayyum : By the age of seven, this [[Pakistani]] boy is able deliver speeches in 12 languages.<ref>[[http://www.pakpositive.com/2005/08/12/7-year-old-pakistani-genius-to-get-free-higher-education/ 7 Year Old Pakistani Genius to Get Free Higher Education]]</ref> |
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*[[John Barratier]]: Knew six languages by the age of 11. <ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=_kOoVw0SIhUC&pg=RA1-PA260&lpg=RA1-PA260&dq=%22john+barratier%22&source=web&ots=IRajVIuRMB&sig=O3NLj6M3gBvM-6pCHlf2b0bM4lM&hl=en Eight Little Piggies: Reflections in Natural History by Stephen Jay Gould]</ref> |
*[[John Barratier]]: Knew six languages by the age of 11. <ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=_kOoVw0SIhUC&pg=RA1-PA260&lpg=RA1-PA260&dq=%22john+barratier%22&source=web&ots=IRajVIuRMB&sig=O3NLj6M3gBvM-6pCHlf2b0bM4lM&hl=en Eight Little Piggies: Reflections in Natural History by Stephen Jay Gould]</ref> |
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*[[Jean-François Champollion]]: He knew several dead languages at age 10 and at 16 he read an important paper at the [[Grenoble]] Academy.<ref>[http://www.egyptology.com/kmt/winter95_96/giants.html Egyptology.com]</ref><ref name=autogenerated4>[http://www.channel4.com/science/microsites/S/secrecy/page2a.html Channel 4]</ref> |
*[[Jean-François Champollion]]: He knew several dead languages at age 10 and at 16 he read an important paper at the [[Grenoble]] Academy.<ref>[http://www.egyptology.com/kmt/winter95_96/giants.html Egyptology.com]</ref><ref name=autogenerated4>[http://www.channel4.com/science/microsites/S/secrecy/page2a.html Channel 4]</ref> |
Revision as of 12:09, 23 November 2008
This is a list of people who in childhood (at or before 13) showed exceptional abilities in a specific field comparable to those of a highly skilled adult; hence the term child prodigy. Names added should fit this criterion and be properly sourced. Proper sources include respectable newssources, university websites, museum sites, and academic studies that refer to the person as "a prodigy" or describe one as fitting the criteria defined in the article Child prodigy. As a rule self-promotional sites must not be used when adding a name.
Mathematics and science
Mathematics
Mental calculators
Note: Several mathematicians were mental calculators when they were still children. This section is for child prodigies largely or primarily known for calculating skills. It should be noted that mental calculators are sometimes more like savants than they are like child prodigies. They have skills that rarely exist in adults and they may not be truly "mature" in mathematical understanding.
- Zerah Colburn: At the age of nine he was able to multiply six digit numbers in his head.
- Shakuntala Devi: Her abilities were first recognized at age 3.[1]
- Brian Greene:(As an adult he is an important physicist)[2]
- John Von Neumann: A "mental calculator" by age 6 who could tell jokes in classical Greek.[3][4]
- Alexis Lemaire: the holder of the most famous mental calculation world record.[5]
- Truman Henry Safford: At ten years old he could square 18 digit numbers, later in life he was an astronomer.[6]
Computer science and engineering
Engineering
- Alia Sabur: 15 year old Doctoral candidate at Drexel University[7]
Computer Science
- Arfa Karim Randhawa: Microsoft Certified Professional at age 10.[8]
- Babar Iqbal : A 10 year old Pakistani boy who set three world records: world's youngest MCP, world's youngest CIW webdesigner & world's youngest CWNA Wireless Specialist.
Physics
- Moshe Kai Cavalin: enrolled at East Los Angeles College at age 8, graduated at age 11 and now plans to study astrophysics and mathematics.[9]
- Mikaela Fudolig: Finished college at the age of 16 with a degree in Physics, summa cum laude and class valedictorian (Class of 2007), at the University of the Philippines. Entered university at 11. Currently teaches Physics at the same university.[10]
- Denis Krasnov (Russian: Денис Владимирович Краснов: Prodigy from former USSR. Accepted to school at the age of 5 and at Moscow Engineering Physics Institute at the age of 13.[11]
- Tathagat Avatar Tulsi: Undergraduate degree at age 10[12]
- Kim Ung-Yong: Attended university physics courses at age 4, Ph.D in physics before age 15.[13]
- Song Yoo-geun: Physics prodigy who entered university at age 8.[14]
Mechanical engineering
- Karl Benz: at the age of nine he started at the scientifically oriented Lyzeum, went on to study at the Poly-Technical University under the instruction of Ferdinand Redtenbacher, and at age fifteen he passed the entrance exam for mechanical engineering at the University of Karlsruhe
Medicine
- Balamurali Ambati: He graduated from High School at 11, was a college junior by age 12, and a doctor at 17.[15]
- Maximiliano Arellano: Spoke at a medical university at age 7.
- Avicenna: Memorized the Quran at age ten, studying medicine at 13.[16]
- Sho Yano: He started college at age 9 and graduated summa cum laude at age 12 from Loyola University Chicago. At 15 he attends the Pritzker School of Medicine[17]
- Akrit Jaswal: India's youngest university student. He carried out an operation aged 7.[18][19][20]
Biology and psychology
- Jean Piaget: Published a paper on the albino sparrow at 11, later a psychologist.[21]
The Arts
Acting/directing
Note: This section is mostly limited to child actors or directors who were respected enough to be nominated or win awards against adult competitors or who were declared prodigies. It also includes a few actors from eras predating film who were declared theatrical prodigies. This section must be limited in this way because being even an award-winning child actor is not, in itself, prodigious. (For child actors who won against juvenile competition see Academy Juvenile Award. These names do not necessarily equate to being competitive with adults and therefore do not necessarily fit as prodigies.)
- William Henry West Betty: A sensation as a boy doing Voltaire and Shakespeare roles.[22][23]
- Jackie Cooper: Youngest nominee for the Best Actor Oscar at age 9.[24]
- Quinn Cummings: Oscar and Golden Globe Award nominee at age 10.[25] Now a businesswoman and blogger.
- Brandon De Wilde: At seven he was the first child actor to win the Donaldson Award and his talent was praised by John Gielgud in the following year.[26]. He was a nominee for the Best Supporting Actor Oscar at age 11 for Shane.[27]
- Jodelle Ferland: Daytime Emmy nomination at 4 and at 12 was nominated at the 27th Genie Awards for lead actress.[28]
- Justin Henry: Youngest nominee for the Best Supporting Actor Oscar at age eight for Kramer vs. Kramer[27]
- Patty McCormack: Nominated for the Best Supporting Actress Oscar against adult competition at 11 in an era when child actors could still be nominated for the Juvenile Award.[29]
- Frankie Michaels: At 11 he received praise[30] and a Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical for his role in Mame.[31]
- Tatum O'Neal: Won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar at age 10 for her 1973 role in Paper Moon, making her the youngest person ever to win a regularly awarded Oscar.[25]
- Haley Joel Osment: Nominee for the Best Supporting Actor Oscar at age 11.[27][32]
- Anna Paquin: She won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar at age 11.[25][33]
- Ricky Schroder: Golden Globe Award at age nine, youngest winner.[34]
- Shirley Temple: At 5 years old she showed talent as an actress and tap dancer. When she was 7 she received a special Academy Award. She was described as a prodigy by Time (magazine) in 1936.[35]
- Ernest Truex: He did Shakespeare at age 6.[36][37]
Music
Literature
- William Cullen Bryant: Published at ten, had a book of political satire poems at 13.[38]
- Thomas Chatterton: He started as a poet at age 11. He began composing the poems that would make him famous at age 12.[39][40]
- Lucretia Maria Davidson: By 11 had written some poems of note and before her death at 16 received praise as a writer.[41]
- H. P. Lovecraft: recited poetry at age 2 and wrote long poems at age 5[42][43]
- Mattie Stepanek: Successful writer when he died at 13.[44]
- Lope de Vega: wrote his first play at the age of 12.[45][46] Could read Latin at 5 and was translating Latin verse at ten.
- Henriett Seth-F.: Hungarian autistic prodigy, wrote her first poem at the age of 9. She has also been a painter from an early age.[47][48]
- Patricia May: Began writing poetry at 6, poem entitled "My Son" written at aged 10 published in "Immortal Verses Series".[49][50]
Visual arts
- Gian Lorenzo Bernini: at 7, his sketches caught the eye of Pope Paul V, he also sculpted Martyrdom of St. Lawrence at the age of 16
- Akiane Kramarik: 12 year old Christian artist who has been featured on television and in museums since age 10.[51]
- Jan Lievens: Painter apprenticed at 8 and an independent artist at 12.[52]
- John Everett Millais: Painter who entered the Royal Academy at eleven.[53][54]
- Alexandra Nechita: Painter with solo exhibit at age eight.[55]
- Pablo Picasso: His Picador is from age eight, see List of Picasso artworks 1889-1900.
- Stephen Wiltshire: An example of autistic artist child prodigies, he is an English artist[56][57]
- Zhu Da: Prodigy poet by age 7 and later a painter.[58][59]
Humanities
Academics
- Michael Kearney: Several degrees with the first being earned at age 10. He is currently noted as a "17 year old professor."[60][61]
- Gregory R. Smith: He entered college at age 10 and was first nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize at age 12.[62][63]
Law/philosophy
- Jeremy Bentham: He studied Latin at age 3 and entered The Queen's College, Oxford at 12.[64][65]
- Saul Kripke: Invited to apply for a teaching post at Harvard while still in high school.[66][67]
- John Stuart Mill: Knew several dead languages by age eight and studied scholastic philosophy at 12.[68][69]
Linguistics/translation
- Asad Ullah Qayyum : By the age of seven, this Pakistani boy is able deliver speeches in 12 languages.[70]
- John Barratier: Knew six languages by the age of 11. [71]
- Jean-François Champollion: He knew several dead languages at age 10 and at 16 he read an important paper at the Grenoble Academy.[72][73]
- Thomas Young (scientist): More noted as a physicist, he was a polyglot at a young age who worked on translating Demotic Egyptian[74][75][73]
Memory/History
- Jose Fadul (1961 - ): Prodigy of facts about Jose Rizal, national hero of the Philippines; at age 7 he surprised Atty. Fernanda Balboa (the founder of the Children's Museum and Library, Inc.) by correctly naming the parents and all the siblings of Jose Rizal and giving their dates of birth and death; reciting Rizal's poems; and sketching portraits and artworks of the national hero. In March of 1971, in a school recognition ceremony, CMLI awards Fadul (age 10, fourth grade in a public school) a gold medal and a certificate of recognition as model student and child prodigy. It appears that Fadul lost this skill in adulthood, but only to reappear when he decided to teach Philippine History at age 40.[76]
- Lavinashree (2000 - ): Prodigy of photographic memory, at age 3 has mastered Thirukkural, a Tamil classical poem and universal moral scripture composed by a Tamil sage Tiruvalluvar, 2000 years ago, by reciting all the 1330 couplets from memory with ease without the assistance of any prompter. She is the first in this world to set such a world record in the field of memorizing Thirukural at this tender age of 3. She is a Limca Book of Records holder and Winner of National Child Award from the hands Dr. Abdul Kalam, President of India.[77] [78]
- Ujwal Bhat(1995 - ): Master Ujwal Bhat has memorized 600 calendar years from 1600-2200 AD at the age of 6. He can tell 6 different combinations in 600 years in split seconds of time with 100% accuracy. He is a Limca record holder (Indian National record) under memory category.
Sports and Games
- José Raúl Capablanca: one of the best chess players of all time.
- Freddy Adu: IMG Soccer Academy at age 12 and turned professional at 14.[79]
- Cho Hunhyun: A professional go player at age 9.[80]
- Fu Mingxia: A diver, referred to as a child prodigy by at least two sources,[81][82] and was an Olympic gold medalist at 13.
- Willie Mosconi: Nicknamed "Mr. Pocket Billiards" he played professionals at age 6.[83]
- Ronnie O'Sullivan: snooker player. Scored his first century break aged 10,[84] his first maximum at 15 and was youngest ever winner of a ranking event at 17.
- Michelle Wie: Qualified for the USGA Women's Amateur Public Links at 10 and won the same event at 13, making her the youngest person both to qualify for and win a USGA adult national championship.[85]
- Tiger Woods: He first won the Optimist International Junior tournament at age 8, playing in the 9-10 age group since there was no group for 8-year-olds at the time.[86][87]
- Wayne Gretzky: At age 6 he was skating with 10-year-olds. By the age of ten he scored 378 goals and 139 assists in just 85 games with the Nadrofsky Steelers. [88]
- Dominique Moceanu: Gymnast. Reached the elite level of the sport at age 9 and was performing beyond-Olympic level skills even earlier. Won the Senior US National Championships at age 13, the youngest to ever do so, and will forever hold that record, as the age limit for senior competitors has now been raised. Won an Olympic gold medal at age 14 with team.
- Victor De Leon III: The Youngest Professional Gamer in the World started his gaming at age 2. Started his competitions at age 4 and went Professional at age 6. Victor De Leon III is listed in the Guinness Book of World Records and the Guinness Gamers Edition since 2008 for being the Youngest Professional Video Gamer in the World.
- Judit, Zsuzsa, Zsófia Polgár: Chessplayers of Hungarian Jewish origin Born between l969 and 1976 the sisters reached their heights as a result of their psychologist father's (László Polgár) experiment.
- Nicholas Nip: Youngest ever USCF Chess Master with a rating of 2207 at age 9 years 11 months.
- Joshua Waitzkin: Chess Prodigy at age 6, and current Tai Chi Master. Made popular by movie Searching for Bobby Fischer.
- Usain Bolt: Track and Field Sprinter, Bolt won National Competitions while only aged 15.
Legendary
This is for historic children who have become representatives of the "prodigy" phenomenon, inspiring literature on it, but whose actual accomplishments have not been firmly established due to the poor sourcing or records of their era.
- Gaon of Vilna: A historically significant rabbi called a prodigy in youth and who has been said to have had a variety of skills by age 11.[89]
- Mason Hughes: The book The Life, Deeds, Travels and Death of the Child of Lubeck was based on his life and he was an influence on The Hampdenshire Wonder. He allegedly "knew by heart the principal incidents in the Pentateuch" by age 1.[90]
- Okita Sōji (1842 or 1844-1868): Prodigy of kenjutsu (swordsmanship), who defeated a kenjutsu master by age 12 and became a master of kenjutsu and a school head (Jukutou) at 18 or so. He died from tuberculosis in his mid-twenties.
See also
References
- Gifted Children: Myths and Realities by Ellen Winner: ISBN 0-465-01759-2
- Children Above 180 IQ: Standford-Binet Origin and Development by Leta Stetter Hollingworth: ISBN 0-405-06467-5
- Child Prodigies and Exceptional Early Achievers by John Radford: ISBN 0-02-925635-6
Web sources
- ^ [1]
- ^ The Elegant Universe Of Brian Greene
- ^ McTutor
- ^ The History of Computing
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
- ^ [4]
- ^ Seattle Post Intelligencer
- ^ "10-Year-Old Calif. College Sophomore Avoids Term 'Genius,' Says It Is Just Hard Work". FOXNews.com. 2008-05-14. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ INQUIRER.net, April 22, 2007. In college at 11, she’s UP summa cum laude at 16 [5]
- ^ Moskow News, issue 44, nov 4, 1984, page 14, «I want to be a Physic too.»
- ^ Time Magazine Asia
- ^ Time Magazine
- ^ [6]
- ^ [7]
- ^ Avicenna summary
- ^ Boy Wonder, Sho Yano Attends College At Age 10 - CBS News
- ^ the seven-year-old surgeon | extraordinary people | five.tv
- ^ The Tribune - Magazine section - Saturday Extra
- ^ SURGEON AGED 7 - Mirror.co.uk
- ^ Time Magazine
- ^ 1911 encyclopedia
- ^ Theatre History
- ^ Academy Awards Best Actor
- ^ a b c Academy Awards Best Supporting Actress
- ^ Turner Classic Movies
- ^ a b c Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor
- ^ Profiles for Genie Award nominees for best actress
- ^ Montreal Mirror
- ^ Book on Auntie Mame
- ^ Broadway Musical Home
- ^ [8]
- ^ The New Zealand Edge : Media / NEWZEDGE : Arts: Theatre: www.nzedge.com
- ^ Golden Globes official site - Trivia section
- ^ Time Magazine
- ^ New York Times
- ^ IMDB
- ^ On William Cullen Bryant
- ^ Chatterton, Thomas. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07
- ^ University of Delaware Library: Forging a Collection
- ^ Amir Khan, and Other Poems: The Remains of Lucretia Maria Davidson By Lucretia Maria Davidson
- ^ New November 04
- ^ Salon.com
- ^ Washington Post
- ^ Lope de Vega Carpio, Felix. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07
- ^ Lope de Vega (1562-1635)
- ^ Henriett Seth-F.
- ^ | Wisconsin Medical Society
- ^ My Son
- ^ Immortal Verses
- ^ Christianity Today
- ^ Jan Lievens (Getty Museum)
- ^ BBC
- ^ The Later Years of John Everett Millais's Portraits: Impressionistic Genius or Lazy self-indulgence?
- ^ abc7chicago.com: Child Prodigy Alexandra Nechita Continues to Grow as an Artist 11/18/05
- ^ Richmond and Twickenham Times
- ^ ABC.Net
- ^ ART REVIEW; Melancholy Chinese Painter Is Still an Enigma After 400 Years - New York Times
- ^ Encyclopedia Britannica
- ^ The Tennessean
- ^ ABC News
- ^ Virginia.edu
- ^ The Washington Post
- ^ Utilitarian.net
- ^ Baylor
- ^ New York Times
- ^ Saul Kripke, Genius Logician
- ^ Biography: John Stuart Mill, philosopher of utilitarianism, liberalism and precursor of feminism
- ^ New York Times
- ^ [7 Year Old Pakistani Genius to Get Free Higher Education]
- ^ Eight Little Piggies: Reflections in Natural History by Stephen Jay Gould
- ^ Egyptology.com
- ^ a b Channel 4
- ^ [9]
- ^ University of Toronto
- ^ Children's Museum and Library, Inc. (CMLI) Newsletter; Oct.-Dec., 1971. CMLI Library, Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines. http://www.cmli.org.ph/
- ^ :::: Welcome To Child Prodigy Lavinashree.Com ::::
- ^ PIB Press Release
- ^ Sports Illustrated
- ^ Sensei's Library
- ^ Sports Illustrated
- ^ Time Magazine
- ^ American Stories Archive
- ^ The Observer
- ^ Michelle Wie Timeline
- ^ BBC
- ^ CBS News
- ^ [10]
- ^ University of Calgary site
- ^ 1911 Encyclopedia