THE 100 MOST INFLUENTIAL INVENTORS OF ALL TIME

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7 The 100 Most Influential Inventors of All Time 7

ordered six more; similar orders came from Britain, Japan,
and Russia.
Holland’s final years were marked by litigation with
his financial backers. One of his last inventions was an
apparatus designed to enable sailors to escape from dam-
aged submarines.


karL benZ and
gottLIeb daIMLer


M


ost authorities are inclined to honour Karl Benz and
Gottlieb Daimler of Germany as the most important
pioneer contributors to the gasoline-engine automobile.
Benz ran his first car in 1885, Daimler in 1886. Although
there is no reason to believe that Benz had ever seen a
motor vehicle before he made his own, he and Daimler
had been preceded by Étienne Lenoir in France and
Siegfried Marcus in Austria, in 1862 and 1864– 65, respec-
tively, but neither Lenoir nor Marcus had persisted. Benz
and Daimler did persist—indeed, to such purpose that
their successor firm of Daimler AG can trace its origins
back to the 1890s and claim, with the Peugeot SA firm of
France, to be one of the oldest automobile-manufacturing
firms in the world. Oddly, Benz and Daimler never met.


Karl Benz
(b. Nov. 25, 1844, Karlsruhe, Baden [now in Ger.]—d. April 4, 1929,
Ladenburg, near Mannheim, Ger.)


Karl Friedrich Benz was a mechanical engineer who
designed and built the world’s first practical automobile to
be powered by an internal-combustion engine. In 1883 he
founded Benz & Co. in Mannheim to build stationary
internal-combustion engines, but he was completely dedi-
cated to the proposition that the internal-combustion

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