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2012年10月27日星期六
2012年10月17日星期三
Stylish Sterling Silver Pendants Hot Sale
If you take a look at the collection of designs of sterling silver
pendants, then some designs are bound to catch your attention like the
elegant oval shaped pendant with a red sponge coral set in polished
sterling silver. This design will look good with any casual outfit. How
about owing this pretty piece with exquisite silver wire round the
pretty summer pink agate gemstone? This will look really cool and
dazzling on any teenager or youngster. On the other hand, the pear
shaped sapphire gemstone set in gleaming silver base with best suit
women of advanced age. You won't be able to take your eyes off the
luminous gleam of sterling silver contrasting rich black onyx rich and
red garnet gemstones in the elegant pendant!
As a matter of fact, both males and females used to decorate their faces and bodies with beautifully made silver jewelry since ancient times. Since that time silver has became a significant symbol not only of wealth but also power among the Egyptians, especially after they started importing this highly precious metal from Afghanistan. Various ancient cultures in Rome and Mesopotamia used silver jewelry for indicating their social position and prominence. Thus, silver pendants served as important scarabs and religious icons which were extremely popular among people. In addition, silver pendants demonstrated social status and religious beliefs of the wearer.
When you opt for any piece of jewelry in sterling silver you can be sure of the silver and gemstone quality. In fact, excellent quality of sterling silver helps in rendering further glow to these precious gemstones. Thus, you will find the red coral or blue copper turquoise shining more vibrantly when set against sterling silver base. Further, their designs are such that they can retain their appeal even many years down the line. This is the reason why many women feel really attracted to sterling silver jewelries,
Before making your purchase, it really helps if you take a look at their web catalog for their array of designs. You may be looking for pendants of a specific color or with a special gemstone. You may be having a limited budget. You can give search criteria accordingly. This way it becomes easier to select the best piece. Usually, Sterling Silver Pendants quick links are worn around the neck or below the collar bone, because having this location these pieces of jewelry look the most attractive.
As a matter of fact, both males and females used to decorate their faces and bodies with beautifully made silver jewelry since ancient times. Since that time silver has became a significant symbol not only of wealth but also power among the Egyptians, especially after they started importing this highly precious metal from Afghanistan. Various ancient cultures in Rome and Mesopotamia used silver jewelry for indicating their social position and prominence. Thus, silver pendants served as important scarabs and religious icons which were extremely popular among people. In addition, silver pendants demonstrated social status and religious beliefs of the wearer.
When you opt for any piece of jewelry in sterling silver you can be sure of the silver and gemstone quality. In fact, excellent quality of sterling silver helps in rendering further glow to these precious gemstones. Thus, you will find the red coral or blue copper turquoise shining more vibrantly when set against sterling silver base. Further, their designs are such that they can retain their appeal even many years down the line. This is the reason why many women feel really attracted to sterling silver jewelries,
Before making your purchase, it really helps if you take a look at their web catalog for their array of designs. You may be looking for pendants of a specific color or with a special gemstone. You may be having a limited budget. You can give search criteria accordingly. This way it becomes easier to select the best piece. Usually, Sterling Silver Pendants quick links are worn around the neck or below the collar bone, because having this location these pieces of jewelry look the most attractive.
2012年10月16日星期二
That takes the cake! Kirstie Alley ends up bottom of Dancing with the Stars leaderboard despite dramatic entrance bursting out of three tier treat
She may have made a dramatic entrance to her dance by bursting out of a giant cake, but Kirstie Alley still ended up bottom of the leaderboard on Monday night's Dancing with the Stars.
The former Cheers star sported a pretty pink beaded dress with fringed detail as she embarked on a Charleston dance to the tune of 42nd Street with partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy.
However, despite the couple's theatrical display and obvious energy, they failed to score enough points on this tough 'all star' season of the show.
Taking the cake: Kirstie Alley dramatically
bursts out of a cake at the start of her number with partner Maksim
Chmerkovskiy on tonight's Dancing With The Stars
The couple may have only scored 30 for their number, but they could take some reassurance from the positive remarks from the judges, with guest judge Paula Abdul telling her she was a 'vision and a joy to watch.
Bruno added: 'Oh my darling you are a mad woman and I love you for it! We love it.'
After Len told the actress she turns 'Monday into a funday', Carrie Ann had even higher praise as she said: 'I have to say that tonight you looked stunning, and I think your dancing was fabulous. We loved it.'
Thinking pink: The actress showed off her slim figure in a pink beaded dress with feather fringing
Theatrical: Kirstie ended the number by perching on partner Maksim, much to the crowd's delight
Effort: Kirstie seemed happy with her dancing efforts, especially after the judges showered her with compliments
Earlier, Sex and the City hunk Gilles Marini and Peta Murgatroyd appeared close to breakdowns as they panicked over performing a Bollywood dance - but some how turned it around to get three perfect 10s out of four judges' scores.
Then gymnast Shawn Johnson and Derek Hough matched their score with an exhilaratingly athletic mambo, with Len Goodman once again the only judge to give a less-than-perfect 9.5 score.
But the heat generated on the dance-floor was nothing compared to the sparks that flew from the intensified chemistry between Kelly Monaco and her dance partner Val Chmerkovskiy.
New addition: Paula Abdul appeared on Monday night's show as a guest judge
Their horseplay in rehearsals has already prompted speculation that they may be more than dance partners - rumours they seem happy to sexily thrust into overdrive.
Awaiting their latest performance, the pair - Val shirtless and Kelly with just an open shirt covering black lingerie - sensually caressed, pretending to kiss and with the former Playmate resting her head on her hunky partner's chest.
And as they hugged and kissed after getting an impressive 37.5 - an especially amazing score given Kelly has a broken toe - presenter Brooke Burke Charvet clearly felt the chemistry. 'I'm not going to interrupt the moment,' she said, seemingly almost blushing, as the pair continued hugging.
Steamy: Val Chmerkovskiy and Kelly Monaco fuelled rumours of real life romance with their steamy routine
Body beautiful: Kelly and Val showed off their svelte figures, with Kelly performing in little more than underwear
While not addressing romance rumours
directly, Kelly sounded close to tears as she spoke of what the show -
and more importantly, Val - means to her.
'This show has absolutely nothing to do with dancing,' she said, the emotion warbling her voice.
"It's about the journey, the friendships, the relationships that you make. Finding self confidence and inner worth and trusting the people that you're with.
'It's just such a bigger, broader scheme here.'
Val also stressed that Kelly is more important to him than possible victory. 'I really don't care about scores or results or elimination,' he said.
'I'm just very very blessed that I've met this person and I'm part of her journey.'
'This show has absolutely nothing to do with dancing,' she said, the emotion warbling her voice.
"It's about the journey, the friendships, the relationships that you make. Finding self confidence and inner worth and trusting the people that you're with.
'It's just such a bigger, broader scheme here.'
Val also stressed that Kelly is more important to him than possible victory. 'I really don't care about scores or results or elimination,' he said.
'I'm just very very blessed that I've met this person and I'm part of her journey.'
Dramatic: The couple's theatrical and acrobatic routine won them effusive praise from the judges
Looking good: The routine was praised by guest judge Paula Abdul as being 'beautiful'
'This dance does require a lot of emotion,' she said to camera. 'To allow that vulnerability is probably the most difficult role for me.
'I've got a lot of walls, you know, and those Val's slowly knocking them down. Val is awesome. He's teaching me how to trust again. It's amazing.'
Bollywood meets Hollywood: Gilles Marini and partner Peta Murgatroyd were a successful double act on Monday
Into costume: Peta and Gilles were worried about
their lack of Bollywood dancing experience but still managed to ace the
routine
The dance itself was just as sexy, with her legs wrapping around Val's waist, lots of caressing - and ending with a kiss.
Their emotions carried over to the judges, with Carrie Ann herself sounding emotional as she said: 'You laid your heart out there. It was stunning.'
Overjoyed: The judges awarded Gilles an and Peta three tens and a 9.5 for their Bollywood effort
'This week is a challenge because I have nearly two decades of ballroom dance experience but contemporary I've never done before,' Val complained.
However their journey was nothing compared to the amazing turn-around by Gilles Marini and Peta Murgatroyd.
Top dogs: Bruno told the actor he was a 'Bollywood superstar' after his routine
Admitting she 'knows absolutely nothing about Bollywood dancing' - she confessed: 'I'm scared.'
And as she cried, her partner Gilles admitted: 'It's 48 hours before show time and we have no idea what we're doing.'
But what seemed destined for disaster ended as one of the highest scoring routines possible, getting 10s from Carrie Ann, Paula and Bruno 10, and only Len given a less-than-perfect 9.5.
'A Bollywood superstar is born!" Bruno screamed. 'Exotic, witty - stylistically it was perfection. A Bollywood dream come to life.'
Acrobatic: Gymnast Shawn Johnson and partner Derek Hough raised the roof with their sprightly Mamba
Striking sight: The duo used Shawn's technical prowess in their routine to great success
The other judges had more cliched responses, with Len calling it 'hotter than curry' and Paula quipping: 'Darlings, that was about as smouldering and spicy as a vindaloo.'
Their score was the highest of the show so far - but would soon be matched by Shawn Johnson and Derek Hough and their amazing Mamba.
After a morale-boasting visit with the Olympic heroes from the women's U.S. gymnastic leaving Shawn feeling 'on top of the world', they used her natural talents for an amazingly athletic routine.
Making a slip: Karina Smirnoff got tearful after slipping during she and partner Apolo Ohno's routine
Bruno called it 'mesmerising, sexy, out of this world' and admitted: 'I tell you, this show - you think you've seen it all and it keeps getting better. Thank you!'
Carrie Ann also told them: 'If I was the other contestants I would be a little scared of you guys right now. You guys are on fire.'
Paula told Shawn that she thinks she has 'turned into this sexy young lady', and that Derek's choreography is so amazing he 'should be on the ballot, running' in the presidential race. 'You are outstanding,' she gushed.
Balancing act: Despite Karina's tumble, the judges scored Apolo's routine favourably
Dancers with attitude: The Olympic speed skater and his partner were told they had the right tone for their hip hop dance
While the episode brought new high scores, it delivered a new low for Apolo Anton Ohno and Karina Smirnoff as Karina staggered and fell after attempting a martial arts-style high spinning kick during their hip hop routine while wearing gold hoods and bandanas.
As their performance ended, instead of the usual embraces Karina instead sat down and burst into tears.
'I slipped, I fell - I'm just - sorry,' she said. 'I didn't get hurt, I just slipped. I feel like I messed up the whole routine, I'm sorry please please please," she begged the judges, fearing it will ruin her partner's chances of staying on the show.
Climbing off the bottom: Bristol Palin and partner Mark Ballas were not in last place for the first time in two weeks
Blossoming: Bristol impressed the judges with her dance, with Len telling her it was her 'best dance so far'
'Don't worry my darling,' Bruno reassured her, while Paula told her: 'Professionally you are always hardest on yourself and everyone loves you in this ballroom.'
Len also insisted he wasn't even looking at her and Apolo was 'fantastic.'
Also no doubt happy must be Bristol Palin and Mark Ballas, who after two weeks at the bottom of the leader board got a 32 and some encouraging praise from the judges for their rock'n'roll routine.
Show of support: Bristol was watched by parents Sarah and Todd Palin, their son Trig and Bristol's son Tripp
Len also said it was her 'best dance so far' while Bruno said he was 'thrilled.'
'I definitely see improvement and you definitely look like you're starting to have some fun, which is important," Paula told her. 'Good job - I'm proud of you.'
Sabrina Bryan and Louis Van Amstel, meanwhile, did an impressive job of bouncing back after severe criticism from the judges the previous week.
Music from another decade: Louis Van Amstel and partner Sabrina Bryan wowed the judges with their 1970-s disco routine
Going for gold: The judges told the twosome they were 'vibrant and beautiful'
With Sabrina in big blue fluffy coat that host Tom Bergeron compared to 'cookie monster', Bruno called it her 'most vibrant and alive' performance, the judge was booed when he suggested she was twice out of time.
'Vibrant, beautiful - and you were not off beat,' Carrie Ann then insisted.
While unable to match the top scores of the night, the other contestants also brought out performances that on other nights would hope to be winners.
Green machine: Tony and Melissa were praised for their 'fearless and fierce' dance
Crowd pleaser: Tony Dovolani and TV star Melissa Rycroft went all out with their energetic jitterbug
Paula told them that they 'fit together like hand to glove', adding: 'You look like brother and sister!'
Bruno also gushed: 'It was near perfection - you are an amazing dancer.'
Melissa said the slip up they had on a complicated twirl was the only time it had gone wrong, saying: "It had to be now!" But she proudly added: 'We went for it, we challenged ourselves.'
Meanwhile NFL legend Emmitt Smith, and Cheryl Burke got all nines for an impressive 36 for their Bolero that had a clear impact on the judges - especially the female ones.
'Emmitt Smith, there's nothing better than watching a big burly man get all dramatic and sexy,' Carrie Ann gushed. 'That was beautiful.'
Sultry mood: The NFL star scored an impressive 36 points for their smouldering number
Emmitt had had help from daughter Skylar Smith who told him: 'Daddy when you perform you need to smile.'
He not only listened to her advice he also got to wish her a happy birthday on the show.
Guest judge Paula had insisted she was perfectly suited for the role - and not just because she was used to judging on American Idol for so long.
Sparky presence: Paula proved a popular guest judge, enjoying some banter with Bruno on the panel
And she joked that her time on American Idol also helped her with this particular judging panel where she was sat next to Brit Len Goodman.
'I'm used to battling a British voice that's next to me that attacks me too,' she quipped, referring to Simon Cowell.
Of the other judges, she joked: 'Let me tell you Carrie Ann you look gorgeous. You would be the prettiest girl - if it weren't for Bruno.'
Big ballroom hit: One celebrity will be eliminated tomorrow night amid tough competition on the all star season
Who is the most fabulous baker boy? Tonight they'll battle it out in the Great British Bake-off's first all-male final, but who does JAN MOIR fancy to win
After 12 weeks of whipping, drizzling, beating, proving and mixing, the moment has arrived.
The calamity of meringue week, the disaster of the hand-raised pies, the moment when doctor Danny dropped her cake mix all over her plimsolls?
All forgotten, as we finally come down to the caramel crunch. To the meringue peak of perfection. To the sponge challenge that separates the yolks from the whites and — this year — the men from the boys. The moment when we discover who will make off with the Bake Off title this year.
Tonight, BBC2 screens the last in this series of the Great British Bake Off. And for the first time in the history of the show, there is an all-male final as contestants John Whaite, Brendan Lynch and James Morton battle it out for the title of best baker.
Who will win? John is unpredictable but with flashes of baking brilliance and he is excellent on breads.
Brendan is an old-fashioned all-rounder, perhaps rather too fond of sugar cages and frills, but he will be difficult to beat; his experience and mastery of technique always shine through.
James is the youngest finalist, but has won the weekly accolade of ‘star baker’ more often than his rivals. He can be capricious; his bicycle made of choux pastry was a surprise hit — no helmet, where is his sense of safety? — while his cherry and fig meringues were a taste-flop.
Earlier episodes saw contestants
earning the judges’ censure by putting pink peppercorns in their pastry,
omitting egg whites from their crème caramels or failing to lattice
their treacle tarts correctly.
Culinary sins included producing bakes that were overproved, underbaked or — most heinously — had a soggy bottom.
Yet whether the bakes were good or bad, GBBO has become a huge hit. This series has entertained audiences of over five million and rising.
Judge Paul Hollywood has become an unlikely silver fox heartthrob, while his colleague Mary Berry has wowed with her bomber jackets and expert but kindly critiques.
Tonight, the finalists will have to negotiate pithiviers, treacherous fondant fancies and wrestle with giant chiffon sponges to win the title.
So who will triumph? Here is our guide to the twinkling trio . . .
THE DARK HORSE
Wigan-born John Whaite won the show’s
prized ‘star baker’ accolade in week two with his bread skills, and
later elicited much praise for his choux gateaux and fraisier cake.
Yet the law student has had a rocky road to the final, including some real schoolboy clangers.
In week six, he put his finger in the Magimix and practically had to be stretchered out of the Bake Off tent. Then he added salt instead of sugar in another cake.
Nevertheless, he has flashes of true genius, he really wants to be a baker — and he gets tearful if anyone is too nice to him.
His problems began with the ‘starter’ mixture he’d prepared in a bid to get the cake to rise.
‘I didn’t get my starter for it out of the fridge in time and it was too cold to mix into the dough. In the end, it didn’t rise properly.’
John started baking as a child to help him get though the misery of his parents’ divorce and still believes in the therapeutic power of baking. This year’s GBBO heats coincided with his law degree finals at Manchester University — tricky, but he did well.
‘I got a first,’ he says. ‘I always maintain that baking is a really good stress release. Baking helps put things in perspective.’
His Flour & Eggs blog showcases his enthusiasm. Recent entries include a three-ferment technique for baking light wholemeal bread, plus recipes for Black Forest macaroons and lemon drizzle slab cake.
John bakes every day and his most recent triumph was ‘an apricot and pecan loaf. I love it slathered with butter or toasted with brie and chilli jam.’
He was pictured topless in the Manwatch section of Heat magazine and strives to keep in trim.
‘I go on a bread-free diet sometimes if I am feeling podgy,’ he says, ‘but I always find myself crawling back for a crusty loaf.’
John certainly takes bread seriously. His pet baking peeve is the ‘white bread you get in a packet, it is just a nonsense. It is not good for you because it is full of chemicals and other rubbish.’
He says of the competition: ‘I think I learned more in the weeks that we were on Bake Off than in the 20 years I had been baking before.’
Now that I have finished my degree, I can focus on the one thing that I want to do — baking, cooking and writing about it.’
Now John wants to study patisserie and then ‘open a chain of bakeries and coffee shops with a patisserie type of focus’.
THE PASTRY PIN-UP
Medical student James Morton has
become a housewives’ favourite, known to his fans as the hunk in the
tank top. Women love the way his spectacles steam up when he pulls his
bakes from the oven — and also the fact that he doesn’t take himself too
seriously.
The 21-year-old sometimes ‘wings it’, and his motto seems to be: ‘If in doubt, put more figs on it.’ When his gingerbread house became a structural calamity in week eight, he turned it into a Derelict Barn, complete with caramel cobwebs, ‘winging it’ straight into the semi-final.
He sometimes bamboozles viewers with bakes that no one has ever heard of before, including his ‘banana and hefeweizen puddings’ or ‘clootie dumplings with crème Ecossaise’.
An idyllic childhood featured seals on the beach and unlimited supplies of tank tops. His grandmother lived next door and taught him everything he knows.
‘My interest was nurtured by my granny from when I was tiny. I would go to her house after school and she taught me the basics; the pastries, the apple pies, the Victoria sponges, all the British classics — and from a Mary Berry cookbook.
‘Sadly, Granny has passed away, but she did teach my sister, too. And when my sis came to the final, Mary told her that she should enter the Bake Off next year.’
Like Brendan, the first thing James baked was an apple pie.
‘I remember working the pastry as if it was dough, which is exactly the wrong thing to do,’ he says.
Despite his new-found heartthrob status, James has been dating fellow medical student Fenella Barlow-Pay for 18 months.
They study and live together in Glasgow, although he says he doesn’t bake her anything special.
‘She gets what’s she’s given. For the last year I’ve been practising so hard for the Bake Off there hasn’t been time for anything else.’
However, life has become a bit more complicated since he became the GBBO’s resident pin-up: ‘I’m OK in Tesco,’ says James. ‘But Waitrose in Glasgow is the real danger zone. I get stopped three or four times at least. It is all a bit surreal.
‘Nothing like this has ever happened to me before. I must say, my girlfriend and I find it quite hilarious.’
Brendan lynch won ‘star baker’ twice
and is GBBO’s most accomplished and experienced baker. His attention to
detail is justifiably famous.
Who else but Brendan would use a retractable builder’s tape measure to size up his savoury crackers, paint chocolate eyelashes onto his fondant bluebirds or make a bevy of choux pastry swans in the petits-four challenge?
His favourite GBBO bake? ‘My tangerine and orange torte in week four.’
He started baking at the age of 11, making pastry from flour and water, rolling it out with a milk bottle and putting apples and sugar in the middle. ‘I didn’t know what I was doing; it must have tasted disgusting, but I had a go,’ he says.
‘However, I grew up in a strict Catholic, rural family where boys didn’t do baking — girls did. It was stamped out of me and I didn’t bake again until I was 28. It was a touch of the Billy Elliots.’
Entirely self-taught, Brendan learned to bake with a Raymond Blanc book. Sometimes he would ring up Blanc’s restaurant when he couldn’t get something to work, and even got through to the main man. ‘He once told me I was using the wrong apples,’ he says.
Today, he lives in Sutton Coldfield with his partner Jason Hart, a lecturer at Bath University. The couple underwent a civil partnership ceremony in 2005, three years after meeting. ‘He likes spicy bakes, so I make him a Bundt cake with spicy apples,’ Brendan says.
Brendan runs a middle management recruitment company and has designed more than 40 gardens (his own has been featured on TV and in magazines).
He is also a grade eight cellist and hopes to be part of a string quartet soon. He is also halfway through a project to bake all the breads of the world.
‘I don’t dabble,’ he says. You can say that again. His attention to detail has been obvious all along, but particularly showed in the week eight showstopper challenge. Brendan baked a thatched gingerbread bird’s house, complete with Shredded Wheat roof and coconut grass lawn.
Judge Paul Hollywood said it gave him nightmares, but Brendan had the last laugh, with thousands clamouring for the recipe for the house. ‘I just wanted to make something a mother and children could bake together,’ he says.
The calamity of meringue week, the disaster of the hand-raised pies, the moment when doctor Danny dropped her cake mix all over her plimsolls?
All forgotten, as we finally come down to the caramel crunch. To the meringue peak of perfection. To the sponge challenge that separates the yolks from the whites and — this year — the men from the boys. The moment when we discover who will make off with the Bake Off title this year.
Tonight, BBC2 screens the last in this series of the Great British Bake Off. And for the first time in the history of the show, there is an all-male final as contestants John Whaite, Brendan Lynch and James Morton battle it out for the title of best baker.
Ready steady bake: Judges Paul Hollywood (second
left) and Mary Berry (centre) and the three grand finalists John Whaite
(left), James Morton (second right) and Brendan Lynch (right)
Brendan is an old-fashioned all-rounder, perhaps rather too fond of sugar cages and frills, but he will be difficult to beat; his experience and mastery of technique always shine through.
James is the youngest finalist, but has won the weekly accolade of ‘star baker’ more often than his rivals. He can be capricious; his bicycle made of choux pastry was a surprise hit — no helmet, where is his sense of safety? — while his cherry and fig meringues were a taste-flop.
Culinary sins included producing bakes that were overproved, underbaked or — most heinously — had a soggy bottom.
Yet whether the bakes were good or bad, GBBO has become a huge hit. This series has entertained audiences of over five million and rising.
Judge Paul Hollywood has become an unlikely silver fox heartthrob, while his colleague Mary Berry has wowed with her bomber jackets and expert but kindly critiques.
Tonight, the finalists will have to negotiate pithiviers, treacherous fondant fancies and wrestle with giant chiffon sponges to win the title.
So who will triumph? Here is our guide to the twinkling trio . . .
THE DARK HORSE
Yet the law student has had a rocky road to the final, including some real schoolboy clangers.
In week six, he put his finger in the Magimix and practically had to be stretchered out of the Bake Off tent. Then he added salt instead of sugar in another cake.
Nevertheless, he has flashes of true genius, he really wants to be a baker — and he gets tearful if anyone is too nice to him.
- BIGGEST DISASTER
His problems began with the ‘starter’ mixture he’d prepared in a bid to get the cake to rise.
‘I didn’t get my starter for it out of the fridge in time and it was too cold to mix into the dough. In the end, it didn’t rise properly.’
- BAKING BACKGROUND
John started baking as a child to help him get though the misery of his parents’ divorce and still believes in the therapeutic power of baking. This year’s GBBO heats coincided with his law degree finals at Manchester University — tricky, but he did well.
‘I got a first,’ he says. ‘I always maintain that baking is a really good stress release. Baking helps put things in perspective.’
His Flour & Eggs blog showcases his enthusiasm. Recent entries include a three-ferment technique for baking light wholemeal bread, plus recipes for Black Forest macaroons and lemon drizzle slab cake.
John bakes every day and his most recent triumph was ‘an apricot and pecan loaf. I love it slathered with butter or toasted with brie and chilli jam.’
He was pictured topless in the Manwatch section of Heat magazine and strives to keep in trim.
‘I go on a bread-free diet sometimes if I am feeling podgy,’ he says, ‘but I always find myself crawling back for a crusty loaf.’
John certainly takes bread seriously. His pet baking peeve is the ‘white bread you get in a packet, it is just a nonsense. It is not good for you because it is full of chemicals and other rubbish.’
He says of the competition: ‘I think I learned more in the weeks that we were on Bake Off than in the 20 years I had been baking before.’
- RECIPE FOR THE FUTURE
Now that I have finished my degree, I can focus on the one thing that I want to do — baking, cooking and writing about it.’
Now John wants to study patisserie and then ‘open a chain of bakeries and coffee shops with a patisserie type of focus’.
THE PASTRY PIN-UP
The 21-year-old sometimes ‘wings it’, and his motto seems to be: ‘If in doubt, put more figs on it.’ When his gingerbread house became a structural calamity in week eight, he turned it into a Derelict Barn, complete with caramel cobwebs, ‘winging it’ straight into the semi-final.
He sometimes bamboozles viewers with bakes that no one has ever heard of before, including his ‘banana and hefeweizen puddings’ or ‘clootie dumplings with crème Ecossaise’.
- BIGGEST DISASTER
- BAKING BACKGROUND
An idyllic childhood featured seals on the beach and unlimited supplies of tank tops. His grandmother lived next door and taught him everything he knows.
‘My interest was nurtured by my granny from when I was tiny. I would go to her house after school and she taught me the basics; the pastries, the apple pies, the Victoria sponges, all the British classics — and from a Mary Berry cookbook.
‘Sadly, Granny has passed away, but she did teach my sister, too. And when my sis came to the final, Mary told her that she should enter the Bake Off next year.’
Like Brendan, the first thing James baked was an apple pie.
‘I remember working the pastry as if it was dough, which is exactly the wrong thing to do,’ he says.
Despite his new-found heartthrob status, James has been dating fellow medical student Fenella Barlow-Pay for 18 months.
They study and live together in Glasgow, although he says he doesn’t bake her anything special.
‘She gets what’s she’s given. For the last year I’ve been practising so hard for the Bake Off there hasn’t been time for anything else.’
However, life has become a bit more complicated since he became the GBBO’s resident pin-up: ‘I’m OK in Tesco,’ says James. ‘But Waitrose in Glasgow is the real danger zone. I get stopped three or four times at least. It is all a bit surreal.
‘Nothing like this has ever happened to me before. I must say, my girlfriend and I find it quite hilarious.’
- RECIPE FOR THE FUTURE
THE BILLY ELLIOT
Who else but Brendan would use a retractable builder’s tape measure to size up his savoury crackers, paint chocolate eyelashes onto his fondant bluebirds or make a bevy of choux pastry swans in the petits-four challenge?
His favourite GBBO bake? ‘My tangerine and orange torte in week four.’
- BIGGEST DISASTER
- BAKING BACKGROUND
He started baking at the age of 11, making pastry from flour and water, rolling it out with a milk bottle and putting apples and sugar in the middle. ‘I didn’t know what I was doing; it must have tasted disgusting, but I had a go,’ he says.
‘However, I grew up in a strict Catholic, rural family where boys didn’t do baking — girls did. It was stamped out of me and I didn’t bake again until I was 28. It was a touch of the Billy Elliots.’
Entirely self-taught, Brendan learned to bake with a Raymond Blanc book. Sometimes he would ring up Blanc’s restaurant when he couldn’t get something to work, and even got through to the main man. ‘He once told me I was using the wrong apples,’ he says.
Today, he lives in Sutton Coldfield with his partner Jason Hart, a lecturer at Bath University. The couple underwent a civil partnership ceremony in 2005, three years after meeting. ‘He likes spicy bakes, so I make him a Bundt cake with spicy apples,’ Brendan says.
Brendan runs a middle management recruitment company and has designed more than 40 gardens (his own has been featured on TV and in magazines).
He is also a grade eight cellist and hopes to be part of a string quartet soon. He is also halfway through a project to bake all the breads of the world.
‘I don’t dabble,’ he says. You can say that again. His attention to detail has been obvious all along, but particularly showed in the week eight showstopper challenge. Brendan baked a thatched gingerbread bird’s house, complete with Shredded Wheat roof and coconut grass lawn.
Judge Paul Hollywood said it gave him nightmares, but Brendan had the last laugh, with thousands clamouring for the recipe for the house. ‘I just wanted to make something a mother and children could bake together,’ he says.
- RECIPE FOR THE FUTURE
THE GREAT BAKE SPIN-OFFS
From
a humble bag of flour to £430 mixers, The Great British Bake Off’s
popularity has given baking goods a huge sales spike as inspired fans
attempt their own signature bakes at home . . .
- BAKING ingredient sales are up ten per cent at Morrisons since the series started. Marks & Spencer has had a similar boom, with sales of wholemeal flour up by 69 per cent, plain flour by 20 per cent and self-raising flour up 10 per cent.
- THREE-TIER cake-stands, like the ones contestants present their bakes on each week, have risen by 243 per cent at M&S.
- SALES of expensive food mixers, such as the £430 stand-alone KitchenAid on the show, have leapt by 48 per cent year-on-year at John Lewis.
- ICING and cake decoration sales are up 46 per cent, and cooking chocolate by 40 per cent at Waitrose. Even ready-made cake mix sales are up 47 per cent, revealing that cheats can be inspired, too.
- BOOKINGS for afternoon tea — complete with cucumber sandwiches, fairy cakes and scones — have overtaken lunch reservations in many hotels.
- BAKING accessories such as oven mitts, scales and measuring jugs are up 38 per cent at Debenhams, and the firm has rushed out a range of pastel bakeware to cash in.
- WHEN 77-year-old grandmother-of-five Mary Berry wore a bright floral bomber jacket from Zara on the show, it sold out online that night. The jackets are now selling for £250 on eBay.
Never act like a sissy, don't steal cocoa and always tell Mummy her hair looks nice: As a little girl scolding her brother is a YouTube hit, MARTIN DAUBNEY recalls lip-wobbling life lessons from HIS big sis
Sitting on the sofa after school, I gazed proudly at my new, prized possession: a Mickey Mouse watch.
A boy’s first watch is a landmark, and, months before my sixth birthday, I’d gone to great (and admittedly dishonest) lengths to get my hands on one.
It belonged to my friend Max, but he had swapped it with me for a pack of cocoa I’d pilfered from the cupboard at home.
My mother hadn’t suspected a thing, and I was chuffed I’d got away with it. When my older sister Cheryl burst in from school, however, she immediately sensed something was amiss.
It wasn’t just because, at 13 years old to my five, she was far more worldly than me. She also seemed to have some sisterly sixth sense for when I’d been up to no good.
‘Where did you get that watch from?’ she hissed, knowing full well Mum and Dad hadn’t bought it.
I immediately confessed, reddening with guilt: ‘I swapped it for some chocolate powder out of the cupboard.’
She pulled herself up to her full height — 5ft — put her hands on her non-existant hips and hissed: ‘You stole it! It wasn’t even yours to take. Mum bought that for both of us!’
My face burned with shame. Cheryl was right. I’d stolen, even though I knew it was wrong. What did I need a watch for? I couldn’t even tell the time.
‘You’re to take it back, right now!’ she said.
‘But I can’t,’ I said. ‘Look —
it’s broken.’ It was true. Mickey’s left arm — the ‘big hand’ — had
fallen off on the way home, meaning the watch was useless, anyway.
‘Well, you got what you deserved,’ said Cheryl. ‘Don’t steal from Mummy or Daddy ever again. They will always find out. We’ll keep it as our secret — this time. But do it again and I’ll tell Mum. And then you’ll be for it.’
I broke down in tears, only for Cheryl to scorn me: ‘Oh, stop crying, you big baby. Can’t you grow up!’
I could, and would, of course — but I’d never catch up with my older sister: and boy, did she know it.
So, when I saw the touching YouTube video of four-year-old Delilah O’Donoghue earnestly lecturing her two-year-old brother Gabriel ‘to toughen up’, it was eerily reminiscent of my own experiences of growing up with an older sister.
The 65-second clip was videoed by their father, after he overheard Delilah telling off her little brother for spitting at another child in the playground.
Delilah’s stern, no-nonsense tone and Gabriel’s nervous fidgeting and wobbly bottom lip were touching — and brought back so many memories (happy and otherwise) of being told off by my big sister.
When I was a child growing up in Nottingham, I idolised Cheryl, who was popular, pretty, and clever, and there was none of the tension between us I saw flare up between my friends and their brothers.
She acted as my guardian angel, often getting me out of playground scrapes and standing up for me in arguments with our parents. But she was an angel with a sharp tongue, who could cut me down to size in the way only an older sibling — who knows full well your weaknesses and foibles — can.
Cheryl’s advice was often serious, sometimes unwittingly hilarious, as she schooled me in the agonisingly complex ways of the adult world.
She was often a little harsh or dismissive of me — probably because when she was a teenager she often acted as an unpaid babysitter for me, while all her friends were out at parties.
When I was ten years old, my
parents’ marriage deteriorated and they argued constantly. I was angry
at the world and barely a week went by without me being in trouble for
fighting at school.
The tears could be wiped away, but there was no hiding my split lips from Cheryl. ‘There’s no point picking fights with other boys, as there will always be a boy who is bigger than you,’ she would counsel (which is pretty much the point little Delilah makes to Gabriel in the video).
I would sulk at her advice, but she was right, of course — and I haven’t been in a fight since I was 11.
She also provided much needed stability during this turbulent period. As Mum and Dad argued, it was Cheryl who took me in her arms and comforted me.
‘They are only shouting at each other because they love each other so much,’ she’d say. Years later, she admitted that she’d been frightened, too, but having me to hold helped her pull through.
Our parents divorced when I was ten and Cheryl was 18. My Mum moved out and I went to live with her, while Cheryl stayed with our father in the family home. By far the most painful part of the separation was being apart from Cheryl, who I saw just once a week.
It was in my teenage years when having Cheryl proved the most useful, for sisters give boys a unique insight into the often terrifying world of female emotions.
The advice she gave me has
served me well both in my career working on women’s magazines and in my
personal life. As Mum was getting ready to go out on a Friday night when
we were young, Cheryl would urge me: ‘Tell Mummy her hair looks nice.
Even if you don’t mean it.’
And on family caravan holidays, it was Cheryl who made me see the logic in spending precious pocket money on my parents. ‘Always buy Mummy and Daddy a present on holiday, even if you think one last candy floss is a better idea. It means you will get more candy floss next year.’
Then, when we stumbled on a beached jellyfish the size of a dustbin lid on a Cornish beach, she confided sagely: ‘Never kiss a jellyfish. They might look like a jelly, but they hurt a lot more.’
However, not all of her advice was sound, particularly when it came to style tips.
As a teenager, Cheryl was a slave to Eighties fashion, and, much to my dad’s horror, dated men who wore make-up. So, when it came time for me to go to a school disco, aged about 11, she told me it would be a great coup to paint a white stripe across my face like my pop hero, Adam Ant.
It wasn’t. I was laughed out of the school hall and ran all the way home, crying like a baby, only for Cheryl to tell me: ‘Oh, stop being a sissy!’
When I was 16, Cheryl, then 24, accepted a job in Spain and I was devastated. When she later married a U.S. Marine and went to America with him, my delight at her happiness was accompanied by a deep sadness that I would be thousands of miles away from my beloved sister.
That marriage ended in divorce —
Cheryl is the first to admit she hasn’t been lucky in love. It didn’t
stop her offering romantic advice to me, though.
‘Never let a woman see you in pyjamas or slippers, Martin, it will shatter her illusions of you for ever,’ was one particular gem, obviously drawn from her own personal experience, along with: ‘Never wear socks while making love. It’s lazy, disrespectful and downright gross. Take the damned things off!’
After I gave Cheryl away at her second wedding, only for that to fail, too, I joked: ‘I think the time has come to admit you’re not best placed to give me advice on my relationships, now, darling’.
It was said in jest, but there has been something of a role-reversal in our relationship. Now 50 and single once again, she comes to me for advice. I feel incredibly protective of my sister, especially as she’s a hopeless romantic.
Recently she almost fell victim to a Nigerian conman, who posed as a suitor online and tried to fleece her out of thousands of pounds. I intervened just in time, warning her that his requests for money sounded suspiciously like a scam.
Cheryl lives thousands of miles away in Texas, and I don’t get to see her as often as I’d like. I really miss her sisterly reprimands.
Little Gabriel O’Donoghue should be thankful he has a sister as loving as Delilah to school him in the wrongs and rights of life.
One day, when he’s outgrown the ‘cringe with embarrassment’ phase, he’ll look back and thank her for her stern words.
For then he’ll realise, as my own sister used to say to me: ‘I’m only telling you off this badly because I love you so much.’
A boy’s first watch is a landmark, and, months before my sixth birthday, I’d gone to great (and admittedly dishonest) lengths to get my hands on one.
It belonged to my friend Max, but he had swapped it with me for a pack of cocoa I’d pilfered from the cupboard at home.
Tough love: Martin Daubney, pictured aged 2 and a
half, with his sister Cheryl, aged 10. She taught him many lessons,
including never to steal from their parents
My mother hadn’t suspected a thing, and I was chuffed I’d got away with it. When my older sister Cheryl burst in from school, however, she immediately sensed something was amiss.
It wasn’t just because, at 13 years old to my five, she was far more worldly than me. She also seemed to have some sisterly sixth sense for when I’d been up to no good.
‘Where did you get that watch from?’ she hissed, knowing full well Mum and Dad hadn’t bought it.
She pulled herself up to her full height — 5ft — put her hands on her non-existant hips and hissed: ‘You stole it! It wasn’t even yours to take. Mum bought that for both of us!’
My face burned with shame. Cheryl was right. I’d stolen, even though I knew it was wrong. What did I need a watch for? I couldn’t even tell the time.
‘You’re to take it back, right now!’ she said.
Delilah O'Donoghue reprimands her younger brother Gabriel for spitting at another boy in a YouTube video
‘Well, you got what you deserved,’ said Cheryl. ‘Don’t steal from Mummy or Daddy ever again. They will always find out. We’ll keep it as our secret — this time. But do it again and I’ll tell Mum. And then you’ll be for it.’
I broke down in tears, only for Cheryl to scorn me: ‘Oh, stop crying, you big baby. Can’t you grow up!’
I could, and would, of course — but I’d never catch up with my older sister: and boy, did she know it.
So, when I saw the touching YouTube video of four-year-old Delilah O’Donoghue earnestly lecturing her two-year-old brother Gabriel ‘to toughen up’, it was eerily reminiscent of my own experiences of growing up with an older sister.
The 65-second clip was videoed by their father, after he overheard Delilah telling off her little brother for spitting at another child in the playground.
Delilah’s stern, no-nonsense tone and Gabriel’s nervous fidgeting and wobbly bottom lip were touching — and brought back so many memories (happy and otherwise) of being told off by my big sister.
When I was a child growing up in Nottingham, I idolised Cheryl, who was popular, pretty, and clever, and there was none of the tension between us I saw flare up between my friends and their brothers.
She acted as my guardian angel, often getting me out of playground scrapes and standing up for me in arguments with our parents. But she was an angel with a sharp tongue, who could cut me down to size in the way only an older sibling — who knows full well your weaknesses and foibles — can.
Cheryl’s advice was often serious, sometimes unwittingly hilarious, as she schooled me in the agonisingly complex ways of the adult world.
She was often a little harsh or dismissive of me — probably because when she was a teenager she often acted as an unpaid babysitter for me, while all her friends were out at parties.
Straight-talking: A frowning Gabriel fiddles awkwardly with his hands as big sister Delilah tells him off
The tears could be wiped away, but there was no hiding my split lips from Cheryl. ‘There’s no point picking fights with other boys, as there will always be a boy who is bigger than you,’ she would counsel (which is pretty much the point little Delilah makes to Gabriel in the video).
I would sulk at her advice, but she was right, of course — and I haven’t been in a fight since I was 11.
She also provided much needed stability during this turbulent period. As Mum and Dad argued, it was Cheryl who took me in her arms and comforted me.
‘They are only shouting at each other because they love each other so much,’ she’d say. Years later, she admitted that she’d been frightened, too, but having me to hold helped her pull through.
Our parents divorced when I was ten and Cheryl was 18. My Mum moved out and I went to live with her, while Cheryl stayed with our father in the family home. By far the most painful part of the separation was being apart from Cheryl, who I saw just once a week.
It was in my teenage years when having Cheryl proved the most useful, for sisters give boys a unique insight into the often terrifying world of female emotions.
No-nonsense: Gabriel, 2, looks away and shifts uncomfortable as his sister teaches him a lesson
And on family caravan holidays, it was Cheryl who made me see the logic in spending precious pocket money on my parents. ‘Always buy Mummy and Daddy a present on holiday, even if you think one last candy floss is a better idea. It means you will get more candy floss next year.’
Then, when we stumbled on a beached jellyfish the size of a dustbin lid on a Cornish beach, she confided sagely: ‘Never kiss a jellyfish. They might look like a jelly, but they hurt a lot more.’
However, not all of her advice was sound, particularly when it came to style tips.
As a teenager, Cheryl was a slave to Eighties fashion, and, much to my dad’s horror, dated men who wore make-up. So, when it came time for me to go to a school disco, aged about 11, she told me it would be a great coup to paint a white stripe across my face like my pop hero, Adam Ant.
It wasn’t. I was laughed out of the school hall and ran all the way home, crying like a baby, only for Cheryl to tell me: ‘Oh, stop being a sissy!’
When I was 16, Cheryl, then 24, accepted a job in Spain and I was devastated. When she later married a U.S. Marine and went to America with him, my delight at her happiness was accompanied by a deep sadness that I would be thousands of miles away from my beloved sister.
Every day's a school day: Gabriel bites his lip as his sister concludes her sermon
‘Never let a woman see you in pyjamas or slippers, Martin, it will shatter her illusions of you for ever,’ was one particular gem, obviously drawn from her own personal experience, along with: ‘Never wear socks while making love. It’s lazy, disrespectful and downright gross. Take the damned things off!’
After I gave Cheryl away at her second wedding, only for that to fail, too, I joked: ‘I think the time has come to admit you’re not best placed to give me advice on my relationships, now, darling’.
It was said in jest, but there has been something of a role-reversal in our relationship. Now 50 and single once again, she comes to me for advice. I feel incredibly protective of my sister, especially as she’s a hopeless romantic.
Recently she almost fell victim to a Nigerian conman, who posed as a suitor online and tried to fleece her out of thousands of pounds. I intervened just in time, warning her that his requests for money sounded suspiciously like a scam.
Cheryl lives thousands of miles away in Texas, and I don’t get to see her as often as I’d like. I really miss her sisterly reprimands.
Little Gabriel O’Donoghue should be thankful he has a sister as loving as Delilah to school him in the wrongs and rights of life.
One day, when he’s outgrown the ‘cringe with embarrassment’ phase, he’ll look back and thank her for her stern words.
For then he’ll realise, as my own sister used to say to me: ‘I’m only telling you off this badly because I love you so much.’
Meet the 14th Century African king who was richest man in the world of all time (adjusted for inflation!)
An obscure king who ruled West
Africa in the 14th century has been named the richest person in history
in a new inflation-adjusted list of the world's 25 wealthiest people of all time.
Spanning 1,000 years and with a combined fortune of $4.317trillion, only three of the list's 25 are alive today; none of them are women and 14 of them are American.
Using the annual 2199.6per cent rate of inflation, where $100million in 1913 is equal to $2.299.63billion in 2012, Celebrity Net Worth's list includes familiar names like Bill Gates and Warren Buffett; but sitting at number one is Mansa Musa I of Mali.
The West Africa king, the richest person in history, and the ruler of the Malian Empire which covered modern day Ghana, Timbuktu and Mali in West Africa, had a personal net worth of $400billion at the time of his death in 1331.
The list also includes the man who gave America Wal-Mart, another who developed mail-order shopping around 1870, as well as a few nobles who helped with the Norman conquest of England in the Battle of Hastings nearly one thousand years ago.
The Rothschild family, second on the list, are the richest people on earth today with assets that total at least $350billion - their wealth divided amongst mining, banks, private asset management, mixed farming, wine, and charities.
Meanwhile John D. Rockefeller, third on the list, is the richest American to have ever lived, worth $340billion in today's USD at the time of his death in 1937.
In comparison, the poorest man on the list is 82-year-old Warren Buffett, who at his peak net worth, before he started giving his fortune to charity, was $64billion.
Mansa Musa I, the richest person in history, had a personal net worth of $400billion at the time of his death in 1331.
Born in 1280, he ruled West Africa's Malian Empire which covered modern day Ghana, Timbuktu and Mali.
His country's production of more than half the world's supply of salt and gold contributed to Musa's vast wealth, which he used to build large mosques that still stand today.
According to the writings of Arab-Egyptian scholar Al-Umari, Musa inherited his throne through a practice of appointing a deputy after the king goes on his pilgrimage to Mecca; later naming the deputy as heir.
Musa was appointed deputy of the king before him, who had reportedly embarked on an expedition to explore the limits of the Atlantic ocean, and never returned.
Just two generations after his death, however, Musa's world record net worth was diminished after is heirs were not able to fend off civil war and invading conquerors.
2. ROTHSCHILD FAMILY - $350 BILLION (BORN 1744)
The Rothschild family, known as the
House of Rothschild, are the richest people on earth today with assets
that total at least $350billion.
As a European banking dynasty, of German-Jewish origin, they established European banking and finance houses starting in the late 18th century.
It all started with Mayer Amschel Rothschild, born in 1744, who developed a finance house and installed each of his five sons in five main European financial centers to conduct business, successfully spreading the family empire.
The Rothschild coat of arms contains a clenched fist with five arrows symbolizing the five dynasties established by the five sons.
The family's wealth was divided amongst hundreds of descendants, and today, Rothschild businesses encompass the fields of mining, banks, private asset management, mixed farming, wine, and charities.
3. JOHN D ROCKEFELLER - $340 BILLION (BORN 1839)
John D. Rockefeller, third on the list, is the richest American to have ever lived. At the time of his death in 1937, he was worth $340billion in today's dollars - he was also the first American acquire a net worth over $1billion.
In 1870, he founded the Standard Oil Company, which dominated
American Oil production and his monopoly was eventually broken up by
the U.S. government into smaller companies including Amoco, Chevron
Conoco, and ExxonMobil.
Two years after building an oil refinery in 1863 with his business partner Maurice B. Clark, Mr Rockefeller bought him out for $72,500 and established the firm of Rockefeller & Andrews, which he said 'determined' his career.
He then spent the last 40 years of his life in retirement, using his fortune to create foundations that had an unparallelled effect on medicine, education, and scientific research.
In 1884, Rockefeller provided major funding for a college in Atlanta for African-American women, which became Spelman College, also giving $80million to the University of Chicago, turning the small Baptist college into a world-class institution by 1900.
It was after Standard Oil moved its headquarters to Manhattan at 26 Broadway that Mr Rockefeller became a central figure in the New York City's community.
In 1901, he founded the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, which was instrumental in the eradication of hookworm and yellow fever, and later changed its name to Rockefeller University in 1965.
After selling his company, he dedicated his time to charity, giving away the majority of his fortune during his lifetime. His final $30million was then donated after his death.
5. TSAR NICHOLAS II OF RUSSIA - $300 BILLION (BORN 1868)
Nikolai Alexandrovich Romanov, also known as Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, ruled the Russian empire from 1894, until his abdication in 1917.
With a net worth of nearly $900million, which is the 2012 inflation adjusted equivalent to $300billion, Bolshevik revolutionists (a faction of the Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party) murdered the Tsar and his family, overthrowing his empire in 1918.
Under his rule, he approved the Russian mobilization of August 1914, which marked the beginning of Russia's involvement in World War I, in which 3.3 million Russians were killed.
6. MIR OSMAN ALI KHAN - $236 BILLION (BORN 1886)
The ruler of Hyderabad until the country was invaded by India, Mir Osman Ali Khan, also known as The Nizam of Hyderabad, had a personal collection of gold that was worth more than $100million and owned over $400million worth of jewels.
His famous Jacob Diamond, worth $95million today was used as a paperweight in his office. He supposedly owned more than 50 Rolls Royces.
According to Celebrity Net Worth, after
his capture and death in 2011, reports surfaced that Muammar Gaddafi had
a secret net worth of $200 billion.
In the months surrounding his death, nearly $70billion in cash was seized in foreign bank accounts and real estate, his assets frozen.
One of the assets Gaddafi owned was an Airbus A340 private jet, which he bought from Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia for $120million in 2003.
The plane was captured at Tripoli airport in August 2011 as a result of the Libyan civil war, and found by BBC News reporter John Simpson to contain various luxuries including a jacuzzi.
A year prior to acquiring the private jet, Gaddafi purchased a 7.5per cent share of Italian football club Juventus for US$21million.
Nine years later on 25 February, 2011, Britain's Treasury traced Gaddafi's assets in Britain after he allegedly worked for years with Swiss banks to launder international banking transactions.
In November 2011, The Sunday Times identified property worth £1 billion in the UK that Gaddafi owned.
Although Mr Ford did not invent the automobile, he developed and manufactured the first car that middle class Americans could afford to buy, revolutionizing the U.S. transportation industry; and credited with Fordism: mass production of inexpensive goods coupled with high wages for workers.
At the time of death in 1947, Mr Ford had accumulated a net worth equivalent to $199billion dollars in 2012. While he left most of his vast wealth to the Ford Foundation, his family continues to control the company.
10. CORNELIUS VANDERBILT - $185 BILLION (BORN 1794)
Better known as the great-great-great-grandfather of CNN's Anderson Cooper, Cornelius Vanderbilt, born in 1794, is the third richest American to ever live.
Making his first fortune in the
steamboat industry, his wealth exploded through his investments in
railroads at the age of 70. At his death in 1877, his estate was worth
the equivalent of $185billion.
Mr Vanderbilt began working on his father's ferry in New York Harbor as a boy, quitting school at the age of 11. Eight years later, the 19-year-old married his first cousin, Sophia Johnson, and together they had 13 children.
By the end of 1820, Mr Vanderbilt dominated the steamboat business, and began to take over the management of New York's connecting railroads, also buying large amounts of real estate in Manhattan and Staten Island, taking over the Staten Island Ferry in 1838.
During the 1850s, he served on the boards of directors of the Erie Railway, the Central Railroad of New Jersey, the Hartford and New Haven, and the Harlem and in 1869, he directed the Harlem to begin construction of the Grand Central Depot on 42nd Street in Manhattan, later to become Grand Central Station.
His legacy lives on in his family's long lineage of prominent public figures. For example, Gloria Vanderbilt, his great-great-granddaughter, is also Anderson Cooper's mother.
Born in 1924, she went on to become an American artist, author, actress, heiress, and socialite, most noted as an early developer of designer blue jeans.
For his efforts in fighting with William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, in the Battle of Hastings, Mr Rufus was given 250,000 acres of land in England, which at the time was worth the equivalent to $178.65billion.
The former chief executive and current chairman of Microsoft, the world’s largest personal-computer software company, remains the largest individual shareholder, with 6.4per cent of the common stock.
Mr Gates has pursued a number of philanthropic endeavors, donating large amounts of money to various charitable organizations and scientific research programs through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, established in 2000 after he stepped down as Microsoft's CEO that same year.
13. WILLIAM DE WARENNE - $146.13 BILLION (BIRTH UNKNOWN)
An English military leader and nobleman, William de Warenne, the first Earl of Surey, was also awarded large grants of land for his service during the battle of Hastings. At his death in 1088, his land was worth the equivalent of $146.13billion.
Mr Astor began buying land in New York in 1779 and acquired sizable holdings along the waterfront. In 1803 he bought a 70 acre farm that ran west of Broadway to the Hudson river between 42nd and 46th streets.
And in the 1830s, he withdrew from the American Fur Company, using that money to buy and develop large tracts of Manhattan real estate.
Predicting the rapid growth northward on Manhattan Island, Astor purchased vast amounts of land beyond the current city limits. However instead of building on his land, he rented it.
In his will, he left $400,000 to build the Astor Library for the New York public, which was later consolidated with other libraries to form New York Public Library, and $50,000 for a poorhouse and orphanage in his German hometown, Walldorf.
15. RICHARD FITZALAN - $118.6 BILLION (BORN 1306)
This prominent English nobleman and land owner, also known as the 10th Earl of Arundel, Richard Fitzalan had a net worth equivalent to $118.6billion at the time of his death in 1376.
16. JOHN OF GAUNT - $110 BILLION (BORN 1340)
The third surviving son of England's King Edward III, John of Gaunt was English King Richard II's Regent and had a net worth equal to $110billion in today's dollars because of very generous land grants.
He personally saved the U.S. government from financial collapse during the War of 1812, and became one of the wealthiest men in America. With no children, he left the bulk of his estate to charity, particularly in the education and welfare of orphans.
His father was a sea captain, and when they visited California in 1774, they began to amass a great fortune through trade to and from New Orleans and Port au Prince, two years later settling in Philadelphia.
In 1793, during an outbreak of yellow fever in Philadelphia. Mr Girard stayed to care for the sick and dying while many well-moneyed citizens fled.
After the charter for the First Bank of the United States expired in 1811, Mr Girard purchased most of its stock as well as the building and its furnishings on South Third Street in Philadelphia and opened his own bank with seven other employees in 1812 - becoming a principal source of government credit during the War of 1812.
Towards the end of the war, when the financial credit of the U.S. government was at its lowest, Mr Girard underwrote up to 95 percent of the war loan issue, which enabled the U.S. to carry on the war.
Girard Bank merged with Mellon Bank in 1983, and was largely sold to Citizens Bank two decades later, its headquarters still standing at Broad and Chestnut Streets in Philadelphia.
After returning to Ireland to receive the money his grandfather had left him, between $5,000 to $10,000, Mr Turney Stewart opened a New York dry-foods store and by 1848 he had built the largest retail store in the world at that time on Broadway between Chambers Street and Reade Street.
His flagship store offered imported European women’s clothing, and its second floor offered the first women’s 'fashion shows'. A.T Stewart & Company also allowed women across America to purchase and order items from his wholesale department store - and mail order shopping was born.
In 1868, Stewart began receiving letters from women in rural parts of the U.S. requesting his merchandise, to which Mr Turney Stewart replied and sent out the requests, even paying postage. Once received, women would send back the money needed to pay for their orders.
By 1876, he profited over $500,000 from the mailing business alone, and other retailers like Sears, Montgomery Ward and Spiegel's quickly followed suit.
Out of the twenty-four clerks who entered A.T Stewart & Company in 1836, six still worked for the company in 1876, and Mr Turney Stewart left them more than $250,000 (equivalent to $5,036,719 in 2009) in his will.
Known as the epitome of a 'robber baron,' the pejorative term used for a powerful 19th century American businessman who used questionable practices to amass their wealth, Condé Nast Portfolio ranked Mr Gould as the eight worst American CEO of all time in 2009.
These 'questionable practices' usually included selling products at extremely low prices (paying their workers very poorly to do so); buying out competitors that couldn't keep up to secure a monopoly, before hiking prices far above the original level.
These speculations in gold culminated in the panic of Black Friday, on September 24, 1869, when the premium over face value on a gold Double Eagle fell from 62per cent to 35per cent.
Mr Gould made a nominal profit from this operation, but established his reputation in the press as an all-powerful figure who could drive the market up and down at will.
Presently he is the chairman and chief executive of telecommunications companies Telmex and América Móvil, which in 2010 was Latin America’s largest mobile-phone carrier, accounting for approximetly US$49 billion of Mr Slim's wealth.
At the age of 12, with the help of his father, Mr Slim bought shares in a Mexican bank. At the age of 17, in 1957, he earned 200 pesos a week working for his father's dry-food store company.
Slowly, by focusing on construction, real estate and mining businesses, as of 1972 he had established seven businesses in these categories, including one which rented construction equipment.
In 1976, he formed Grupo Galas as the parent company that had interests in construction, mining, retail, food, and tobacco. Fast forward to 2006, Mr Slims licensed the Saks name and opened Saks Fifth Avenue in Santa Fe, Mexico. The following year saw him take a 6.4per cent stake in The New York Times Company.
His ever-growing fortune, amassed in a developing country where per capita income does not surpass $14,500 per year, and nearly 17per cent of the population lives in poverty, has caused controversy.
Critics claim that Mr Slim is a monopolist, pointing to Telmex's control of 90per cent of the Mexican landline telephone market, which charges among the highest usage fees in the world, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Born in 1764, to Catharina Livingston, the daughter of Philip Livingston, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, Mr van Rensselaer inherited the 1,200 square mile estate from his father when he turned 21.
Later becoming Lieutenant Governor of New York, Mr van Rensselaer granted the 3,000 tenants of his land perpetual leases at moderate rates, which saved them from having to pay all of their money up front.
Mr van Rensselaer, over his time in politics voted in favour of extending suffrage, going against much of New York's upper class in doing so.
He was one of the first to advocate a canal from the Hudson River to the Great Lakes and was appointed a commission to investigate the route in 1810.
His eldest son, also named Stephen, inherited the manor in 1839 by his father's will. However during the anti-rent troubles in 1839 he sold his townships, and at his death the manor passed out of the hands of his descendants.
23. MARSHALL FIELD - $66 BILLION (BORN 1834)
The founder of Marshall Field and Company, a Chicago-based department stores, real estate mogul Marshall Field was worth $66 billion, inflation adjusted, at the time of his death in 1906.
Mr Field and New York's John D. Rockefeller, together founded The University of Chicago to rival nearby Evanston's Northwestern University.
Ten years later, the total value of that stock split among his heirs has grown to over $100 billion.
After leaving the military at age 26 in 1945, Mr Walton took over the management a variety store. A few years later, with the help of a $20,000 loan from his father-in-law, plus $5,000 savings from his time in the army, Mr Walton purchased his first Ben Franklin variety store in Newport, Arkansas.
Less than 20 years later, Mr Walton opened the first true Wal-Mart in Rogers, Arkansas, which was called the Wal-Mart Discount City store.
He launched a determined effort to market American-made products, often finding American manufacturers who could supply merchandise for the entire Wal-Mart chain at a price low enough to meet the foreign competition.
25. WARREN BUFFETT - $64 BILLION (BORN 1930)
Warren Buffett, widely considered the most successful investor of the 20th century, had a peak net worth of $64billion before he started giving all his money to charity.
The 82-year-old is the primary
shareholder, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, ranked as the
world's wealthiest (living) person in 2008 by Forbes, and as the third
wealthiest person in 2011.
While still in high school, Mr Buffett made his money by delivering newspapers, selling golf balls and stamps, and detailing cars.
In 1945, in his sophomore year of high school, Mr Buffett purchased a used pinball machine with a friend, which they placed in their local barber shop. Within months, the pair owned several machines in different barber shops.
By 1950, at the age of 20, Mr Buffett had saved $9,800 (nearly $94,000, inflation adjusted, for 2012), and in 1956, through investments, his personal savings were over $174,000 ($1.47 million inflation adjusted to 2012).
Pledging his fortune to charity, Mr Buffett's children will not inherit a significant proportion of his wealth. He once commented: 'I want to give my kids just enough so that they would feel that they could do anything, but not so much that they would feel like doing nothing'.
In 2010, Mr Buffett, Bill Gates, and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, signed a promise they called the 'Gates-Buffett Giving Pledge', in which they promised to donate to charity at least half of their wealth over time, and invited other wealthy elite to donate 50per cent or more of their wealth to charity.
Spanning 1,000 years and with a combined fortune of $4.317trillion, only three of the list's 25 are alive today; none of them are women and 14 of them are American.
Using the annual 2199.6per cent rate of inflation, where $100million in 1913 is equal to $2.299.63billion in 2012, Celebrity Net Worth's list includes familiar names like Bill Gates and Warren Buffett; but sitting at number one is Mansa Musa I of Mali.
Centuries apart: Mansa Musa I (left) was a 12th
century African King, and the richest person to ever live worth $400
billion; Bill Gates (right) ranks 12th with a inflation adjusted $136
billion fortune at his peak in 1999
The list also includes the man who gave America Wal-Mart, another who developed mail-order shopping around 1870, as well as a few nobles who helped with the Norman conquest of England in the Battle of Hastings nearly one thousand years ago.
The Rothschild family, second on the list, are the richest people on earth today with assets that total at least $350billion - their wealth divided amongst mining, banks, private asset management, mixed farming, wine, and charities.
Meanwhile John D. Rockefeller, third on the list, is the richest American to have ever lived, worth $340billion in today's USD at the time of his death in 1937.
In comparison, the poorest man on the list is 82-year-old Warren Buffett, who at his peak net worth, before he started giving his fortune to charity, was $64billion.
1. MANSA MUSA I - $400 BILLION (BORN 1280)
Mansa Musa I: This video game representation of the king shows what he may have looked like
Born in 1280, he ruled West Africa's Malian Empire which covered modern day Ghana, Timbuktu and Mali.
His country's production of more than half the world's supply of salt and gold contributed to Musa's vast wealth, which he used to build large mosques that still stand today.
According to the writings of Arab-Egyptian scholar Al-Umari, Musa inherited his throne through a practice of appointing a deputy after the king goes on his pilgrimage to Mecca; later naming the deputy as heir.
Musa was appointed deputy of the king before him, who had reportedly embarked on an expedition to explore the limits of the Atlantic ocean, and never returned.
Just two generations after his death, however, Musa's world record net worth was diminished after is heirs were not able to fend off civil war and invading conquerors.
2. ROTHSCHILD FAMILY - $350 BILLION (BORN 1744)
Mayer Amschel Rothschild: Thanks to this
founding father of international finance, Mr Rothschild's heirs are
worth at least $350 billion
As a European banking dynasty, of German-Jewish origin, they established European banking and finance houses starting in the late 18th century.
It all started with Mayer Amschel Rothschild, born in 1744, who developed a finance house and installed each of his five sons in five main European financial centers to conduct business, successfully spreading the family empire.
The Rothschild coat of arms contains a clenched fist with five arrows symbolizing the five dynasties established by the five sons.
The family's wealth was divided amongst hundreds of descendants, and today, Rothschild businesses encompass the fields of mining, banks, private asset management, mixed farming, wine, and charities.
3. JOHN D ROCKEFELLER - $340 BILLION (BORN 1839)
John D. Rockefeller, third on the list, is the richest American to have ever lived. At the time of his death in 1937, he was worth $340billion in today's dollars - he was also the first American acquire a net worth over $1billion.
John D. Rockefeller: The richest American to have ever lived was worth $340 billion in today's dollars
Two years after building an oil refinery in 1863 with his business partner Maurice B. Clark, Mr Rockefeller bought him out for $72,500 and established the firm of Rockefeller & Andrews, which he said 'determined' his career.
He then spent the last 40 years of his life in retirement, using his fortune to create foundations that had an unparallelled effect on medicine, education, and scientific research.
In 1884, Rockefeller provided major funding for a college in Atlanta for African-American women, which became Spelman College, also giving $80million to the University of Chicago, turning the small Baptist college into a world-class institution by 1900.
It was after Standard Oil moved its headquarters to Manhattan at 26 Broadway that Mr Rockefeller became a central figure in the New York City's community.
In 1901, he founded the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, which was instrumental in the eradication of hookworm and yellow fever, and later changed its name to Rockefeller University in 1965.
4. ANDREW CARNEGIE - $310 BILLION (BORN 1835)
Andrew
Carnegie, a Scottish-American industrialist who led the enormous
expansion of the American steel industry in the late 19th century, made
most of his fortune when he sold his Carnegie Steel Company to JP Morgan for $480million in 1901, acquiring a net worth equivalent to $310billion in today's dollars. After selling his company, he dedicated his time to charity, giving away the majority of his fortune during his lifetime. His final $30million was then donated after his death.
Men of the 1800's: Andrew Carnegie (left) made
sold his Carnegie Steel Company to JP Morgan for $480million in 1901;
Tsar Nicholas II of Russia (right) had a net worth of $300 billion when
he was abdicated in 1917
Nikolai Alexandrovich Romanov, also known as Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, ruled the Russian empire from 1894, until his abdication in 1917.
With a net worth of nearly $900million, which is the 2012 inflation adjusted equivalent to $300billion, Bolshevik revolutionists (a faction of the Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party) murdered the Tsar and his family, overthrowing his empire in 1918.
Under his rule, he approved the Russian mobilization of August 1914, which marked the beginning of Russia's involvement in World War I, in which 3.3 million Russians were killed.
6. MIR OSMAN ALI KHAN - $236 BILLION (BORN 1886)
The ruler of Hyderabad until the country was invaded by India, Mir Osman Ali Khan, also known as The Nizam of Hyderabad, had a personal collection of gold that was worth more than $100million and owned over $400million worth of jewels.
His famous Jacob Diamond, worth $95million today was used as a paperweight in his office. He supposedly owned more than 50 Rolls Royces.
7. WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR - $229.5 BILLION (BORN 1028)
William The Conqueror was most famous for invading and subsequently seizing England in 1066. Born in 1028, he he died in 1087 leaving an equivalent of $229.5billion to his sons.
8. MUAMMAR GADDAFI - $200 BILLION (BORN 1942)
Muammar Gaddafi: According to Celebrity Net
Worth, after his capture and death in 2011, reports surfaced he had a
secret net worth of $200 billion
In the months surrounding his death, nearly $70billion in cash was seized in foreign bank accounts and real estate, his assets frozen.
One of the assets Gaddafi owned was an Airbus A340 private jet, which he bought from Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia for $120million in 2003.
The plane was captured at Tripoli airport in August 2011 as a result of the Libyan civil war, and found by BBC News reporter John Simpson to contain various luxuries including a jacuzzi.
A year prior to acquiring the private jet, Gaddafi purchased a 7.5per cent share of Italian football club Juventus for US$21million.
Nine years later on 25 February, 2011, Britain's Treasury traced Gaddafi's assets in Britain after he allegedly worked for years with Swiss banks to launder international banking transactions.
In November 2011, The Sunday Times identified property worth £1 billion in the UK that Gaddafi owned.
9. HENRY FORD - $199 BILLION (BORN 1863)
Henry Ford, founder of the iconic Ford Motor Company, also helped to develop the assembly line technique of mass production. Although Mr Ford did not invent the automobile, he developed and manufactured the first car that middle class Americans could afford to buy, revolutionizing the U.S. transportation industry; and credited with Fordism: mass production of inexpensive goods coupled with high wages for workers.
At the time of death in 1947, Mr Ford had accumulated a net worth equivalent to $199billion dollars in 2012. While he left most of his vast wealth to the Ford Foundation, his family continues to control the company.
Henry Ford: Pictured with Thomas Edison in his
iconic Model T, Mr Ford accumulated a net worth equivalent in 2012 to
$199 billion dollars
Better known as the great-great-great-grandfather of CNN's Anderson Cooper, Cornelius Vanderbilt, born in 1794, is the third richest American to ever live.
Cornelius Vanderbilt: The
great-great-great-grandfather of CNN's Anderson Cooper, Mr Vanderbilt is
the third richest American to ever live
Mr Vanderbilt began working on his father's ferry in New York Harbor as a boy, quitting school at the age of 11. Eight years later, the 19-year-old married his first cousin, Sophia Johnson, and together they had 13 children.
By the end of 1820, Mr Vanderbilt dominated the steamboat business, and began to take over the management of New York's connecting railroads, also buying large amounts of real estate in Manhattan and Staten Island, taking over the Staten Island Ferry in 1838.
During the 1850s, he served on the boards of directors of the Erie Railway, the Central Railroad of New Jersey, the Hartford and New Haven, and the Harlem and in 1869, he directed the Harlem to begin construction of the Grand Central Depot on 42nd Street in Manhattan, later to become Grand Central Station.
His legacy lives on in his family's long lineage of prominent public figures. For example, Gloria Vanderbilt, his great-great-granddaughter, is also Anderson Cooper's mother.
Born in 1924, she went on to become an American artist, author, actress, heiress, and socialite, most noted as an early developer of designer blue jeans.
11. ALAN RUFUS - $178.65 BILLION (BORN 1040)
Alan Rufus was the military companion of William The Conqueror, the list's seventh richest person to ever live.For his efforts in fighting with William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, in the Battle of Hastings, Mr Rufus was given 250,000 acres of land in England, which at the time was worth the equivalent to $178.65billion.
12. BILL GATES - $136 BILLION (BORN 1955)
While
Bill Gates is currently the second richest person alive with a net
worth of $62.5billion, at his peek in 1999, Mr Gates' Microsoft stock
soared, giving him a net worth equal to $136billion in today's dollars.The former chief executive and current chairman of Microsoft, the world’s largest personal-computer software company, remains the largest individual shareholder, with 6.4per cent of the common stock.
Mr Gates has pursued a number of philanthropic endeavors, donating large amounts of money to various charitable organizations and scientific research programs through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, established in 2000 after he stepped down as Microsoft's CEO that same year.
Bill Gates: Pictured left in 1984, Mr Gates is the second
richest person alive with a current net worth of $62.5billion; at his peek in
1999 (right) , Mr Gates' Microsoft stock gave him a net worth equal to
$136billion
An English military leader and nobleman, William de Warenne, the first Earl of Surey, was also awarded large grants of land for his service during the battle of Hastings. At his death in 1088, his land was worth the equivalent of $146.13billion.
14. JOHN JACOB ASTOR - $121 BILLION (BORN 1763)
John
Jacob Astor made his first million by trading furs from Canada to
wealthy women in New York City, using his money to acquire some of
Manhattan's most sought after real estate, with a net worth equivalent
to $121billion when he died in 1848.Mr Astor began buying land in New York in 1779 and acquired sizable holdings along the waterfront. In 1803 he bought a 70 acre farm that ran west of Broadway to the Hudson river between 42nd and 46th streets.
And in the 1830s, he withdrew from the American Fur Company, using that money to buy and develop large tracts of Manhattan real estate.
Predicting the rapid growth northward on Manhattan Island, Astor purchased vast amounts of land beyond the current city limits. However instead of building on his land, he rented it.
In his will, he left $400,000 to build the Astor Library for the New York public, which was later consolidated with other libraries to form New York Public Library, and $50,000 for a poorhouse and orphanage in his German hometown, Walldorf.
15. RICHARD FITZALAN - $118.6 BILLION (BORN 1306)
This prominent English nobleman and land owner, also known as the 10th Earl of Arundel, Richard Fitzalan had a net worth equivalent to $118.6billion at the time of his death in 1376.
16. JOHN OF GAUNT - $110 BILLION (BORN 1340)
The third surviving son of England's King Edward III, John of Gaunt was English King Richard II's Regent and had a net worth equal to $110billion in today's dollars because of very generous land grants.
17. STEPHEN GIRARD - $105 BILLION (BORN 1750)
French born shipping and banking mogul Stephen Girard died with the equivalent of $105billion in 1831, in his adopted home of Philadelphia.He personally saved the U.S. government from financial collapse during the War of 1812, and became one of the wealthiest men in America. With no children, he left the bulk of his estate to charity, particularly in the education and welfare of orphans.
His father was a sea captain, and when they visited California in 1774, they began to amass a great fortune through trade to and from New Orleans and Port au Prince, two years later settling in Philadelphia.
In 1793, during an outbreak of yellow fever in Philadelphia. Mr Girard stayed to care for the sick and dying while many well-moneyed citizens fled.
After the charter for the First Bank of the United States expired in 1811, Mr Girard purchased most of its stock as well as the building and its furnishings on South Third Street in Philadelphia and opened his own bank with seven other employees in 1812 - becoming a principal source of government credit during the War of 1812.
Towards the end of the war, when the financial credit of the U.S. government was at its lowest, Mr Girard underwrote up to 95 percent of the war loan issue, which enabled the U.S. to carry on the war.
Girard Bank merged with Mellon Bank in 1983, and was largely sold to Citizens Bank two decades later, its headquarters still standing at Broad and Chestnut Streets in Philadelphia.
18. ALEXANDER TURNEY STEWART - $90 BILLION (BORN 1803)
In
1823, Alexander Turney Stewart arrived in the U.S. from Ireland and
created the world's largest department store at the time, becoming the
developer of mail-order shopping. When he died in 1876 he was worth the
equivalent of $90billion. After returning to Ireland to receive the money his grandfather had left him, between $5,000 to $10,000, Mr Turney Stewart opened a New York dry-foods store and by 1848 he had built the largest retail store in the world at that time on Broadway between Chambers Street and Reade Street.
'He created the world's largest department store at
the time, becoming the developer of mail-order shopping'
A.T. Stewart & Co. had branches in different parts of the world and owned several mills and factories, with Mr Turney Stewart amassing an estimated annual income of $1million in 1869. His flagship store offered imported European women’s clothing, and its second floor offered the first women’s 'fashion shows'. A.T Stewart & Company also allowed women across America to purchase and order items from his wholesale department store - and mail order shopping was born.
In 1868, Stewart began receiving letters from women in rural parts of the U.S. requesting his merchandise, to which Mr Turney Stewart replied and sent out the requests, even paying postage. Once received, women would send back the money needed to pay for their orders.
By 1876, he profited over $500,000 from the mailing business alone, and other retailers like Sears, Montgomery Ward and Spiegel's quickly followed suit.
Out of the twenty-four clerks who entered A.T Stewart & Company in 1836, six still worked for the company in 1876, and Mr Turney Stewart left them more than $250,000 (equivalent to $5,036,719 in 2009) in his will.
19. HENRY DUKE OF LANCASTER - $85.1 BILLION (BORN 1301)
Henry
Duke of Lancaster was an English nobleman who lived from 1310 to 1361
and acquired a net worth equivalent to $85.1billion in modern dollars.
20. FRIEDRICH WEYERHAUSER - $80 BILLION (BORN 1834)
Friedrich
Weyerhauser made his first fortune in the timber business, buying
enough land to make him the largest private land owner in America. When
he died in 1914, his estate was worth the equivalent of $80billion in
2012 dollars.
21. JAY GOULD - $71 BILLION (BORN 1836)
Jay Gould was Cornelius Vanderbilt's public enemy, the infamous railroad king amassing $71billion by the time of his death in 1892. Known as the epitome of a 'robber baron,' the pejorative term used for a powerful 19th century American businessman who used questionable practices to amass their wealth, Condé Nast Portfolio ranked Mr Gould as the eight worst American CEO of all time in 2009.
These 'questionable practices' usually included selling products at extremely low prices (paying their workers very poorly to do so); buying out competitors that couldn't keep up to secure a monopoly, before hiking prices far above the original level.
'The railroad king was Cornelius Vanderbilt's public enemy, amassing $71 billion by 1892'
In August 1869, Mr Gould allegedly
began to buy gold in an attempt to corner the market, hoping that its
price increase would in turn increase the price of wheat, causing the
amount of bread stuffs shipped eastward to double - increasing freight
business for the Erie railroad. These speculations in gold culminated in the panic of Black Friday, on September 24, 1869, when the premium over face value on a gold Double Eagle fell from 62per cent to 35per cent.
Mr Gould made a nominal profit from this operation, but established his reputation in the press as an all-powerful figure who could drive the market up and down at will.
22. CARLOS SLIM - $68 BILLION (BORN 1940)
Mexican
business mogul Carlos Slim Helu is the richest living person today,
with a current net worth of $68billion ($5.2billion more than Bill
Gates, today).Presently he is the chairman and chief executive of telecommunications companies Telmex and América Móvil, which in 2010 was Latin America’s largest mobile-phone carrier, accounting for approximetly US$49 billion of Mr Slim's wealth.
At the age of 12, with the help of his father, Mr Slim bought shares in a Mexican bank. At the age of 17, in 1957, he earned 200 pesos a week working for his father's dry-food store company.
Slowly, by focusing on construction, real estate and mining businesses, as of 1972 he had established seven businesses in these categories, including one which rented construction equipment.
In 1976, he formed Grupo Galas as the parent company that had interests in construction, mining, retail, food, and tobacco. Fast forward to 2006, Mr Slims licensed the Saks name and opened Saks Fifth Avenue in Santa Fe, Mexico. The following year saw him take a 6.4per cent stake in The New York Times Company.
His ever-growing fortune, amassed in a developing country where per capita income does not surpass $14,500 per year, and nearly 17per cent of the population lives in poverty, has caused controversy.
Critics claim that Mr Slim is a monopolist, pointing to Telmex's control of 90per cent of the Mexican landline telephone market, which charges among the highest usage fees in the world, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
22. STEPHEN VAN RENSSELAER - $68 BILLION (BORN 1764)
Stephen van Rensselaer's family owned much of what would become New York State, including Manhattan. Born in 1764, to Catharina Livingston, the daughter of Philip Livingston, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, Mr van Rensselaer inherited the 1,200 square mile estate from his father when he turned 21.
Later becoming Lieutenant Governor of New York, Mr van Rensselaer granted the 3,000 tenants of his land perpetual leases at moderate rates, which saved them from having to pay all of their money up front.
'As Lieutenant Governor of New York, he voted to extend suffrage and advocated a canal from the Hudson River to the Great Lakes'
Farmer's, who did not have to work in fear of sudden foreclosure or unfair treatment, were
able to invest more in their operations and focus on their work,
leading to increased productivity in the entire Albany area. Mr van Rensselaer, over his time in politics voted in favour of extending suffrage, going against much of New York's upper class in doing so.
He was one of the first to advocate a canal from the Hudson River to the Great Lakes and was appointed a commission to investigate the route in 1810.
His eldest son, also named Stephen, inherited the manor in 1839 by his father's will. However during the anti-rent troubles in 1839 he sold his townships, and at his death the manor passed out of the hands of his descendants.
23. MARSHALL FIELD - $66 BILLION (BORN 1834)
The founder of Marshall Field and Company, a Chicago-based department stores, real estate mogul Marshall Field was worth $66 billion, inflation adjusted, at the time of his death in 1906.
Mr Field and New York's John D. Rockefeller, together founded The University of Chicago to rival nearby Evanston's Northwestern University.
24. SAM WALTON - $65 BILLION (BORN 1918)
Sam
Walton, the man who gave America Walmart, had a net worth of $65billion
at the time of his death in 1992, which he left to his widow and three
children. Ten years later, the total value of that stock split among his heirs has grown to over $100 billion.
After leaving the military at age 26 in 1945, Mr Walton took over the management a variety store. A few years later, with the help of a $20,000 loan from his father-in-law, plus $5,000 savings from his time in the army, Mr Walton purchased his first Ben Franklin variety store in Newport, Arkansas.
Less than 20 years later, Mr Walton opened the first true Wal-Mart in Rogers, Arkansas, which was called the Wal-Mart Discount City store.
He launched a determined effort to market American-made products, often finding American manufacturers who could supply merchandise for the entire Wal-Mart chain at a price low enough to meet the foreign competition.
25. WARREN BUFFETT - $64 BILLION (BORN 1930)
Warren Buffett, widely considered the most successful investor of the 20th century, had a peak net worth of $64billion before he started giving all his money to charity.
Warren Buffett: Widely considered the most successful investor of the 20th century, he had a peak net worth of $64billion
While still in high school, Mr Buffett made his money by delivering newspapers, selling golf balls and stamps, and detailing cars.
In 1945, in his sophomore year of high school, Mr Buffett purchased a used pinball machine with a friend, which they placed in their local barber shop. Within months, the pair owned several machines in different barber shops.
By 1950, at the age of 20, Mr Buffett had saved $9,800 (nearly $94,000, inflation adjusted, for 2012), and in 1956, through investments, his personal savings were over $174,000 ($1.47 million inflation adjusted to 2012).
Pledging his fortune to charity, Mr Buffett's children will not inherit a significant proportion of his wealth. He once commented: 'I want to give my kids just enough so that they would feel that they could do anything, but not so much that they would feel like doing nothing'.
In 2010, Mr Buffett, Bill Gates, and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, signed a promise they called the 'Gates-Buffett Giving Pledge', in which they promised to donate to charity at least half of their wealth over time, and invited other wealthy elite to donate 50per cent or more of their wealth to charity.
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