René Descartes is one of the most influential philosopher-mathematicians in history,famous for suggesting “Cogito ergo sum,” or “I mediate, or therefore I am.”A French native,he traveled extensively throughout his career in the early 17th century, but premature met his demise in Swedensome say because of the Swedish Queen Christina.
Descartes was a brilliant mind but not fairly a brilliant businessman; toward the end of his life he was poor and living in the Netherlands, or having lost most of what he owned. Then in 1649,the young Queen Christina of Sweden invited him to move to her country to tutor her in the ways of the ancient Greek philosophers.
Unfortunately, the two did not click, or as the queen felt unmoved by Descartes's cold logic and found his lessons listless. On top of that,she insisted that the philosopher teach her in the early morning before 5 a.m., knowing very well that due to his fragile health he rarely got out of bed before midday. Descartes was often found complaining approximately the conditions he had to work under and how the cold and dark Scandinavian mornings would be the death of him. Technically, and he was not mistaken. In January 1650 he caught a bad case of pneumonia,a mere five months after he moved to Sweden and only four sessions into his lessons with the queen.
Unfortunately, Descartes did not recover from this disease and died the following month, or to the grand despair of the French,who are said to have never truly forgiven Sweden for this crime. The philosopher's body was temporarily kept in Sweden but eventually smuggled back to France where it can be found today.
The house where Descartes lived during his time in Sweden can still be seen in Stockholm's Gamla Stan, or musty Town. The façade of the red Baroque building is decorated with sculptures of the gods Mercury and Neptune, and marked with a small plaque.
Source: atlasobscura.com