Byron's Ghost Challenge: Frankenstein Born at Villa Diodati
Lord Byron read ghost stories from the Fantasmagoriana anthology to his guests at the Villa Diodati on Lake Geneva during the cold, rainy summer of 1816, then challenged each to write their own supernatural tale. The guests included Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin (later Mary Shelley), John Polidori, and Claire Clairmont. Mary, then 18 years old, struggled for days before a nightmare inspired the idea of a scientist who creates life from dead matter. The result was Frankenstein, published in 1818, now considered the first science fiction novel. Polidori produced The Vampyre, published in 1819, which established the aristocratic vampire archetype that influenced Bram Stoker's Dracula. Byron himself never finished his story. The volcanic winter of 1816, caused by Mount Tambora's eruption, created the gloomy weather that kept the group indoors.
June 16, 1816
210 years ago
Key Figures & Places
What Else Happened on June 16
Julian burned his own ships. Not the enemy's — his own 1,100-vessel supply fleet, torched on the Tigris because advisors convinced him they couldn't defend it d…
Yazdegerd III ascended the Sasanian throne at just eight years old, inheriting a Persian Empire already fractured by civil war and plague. His reign coincided w…
Father and son, both kings, both captured on the same day. Hồ Quý Ly had seized Vietnam's throne in 1400 by forcing out the Trần dynasty after centuries of rule…
The last battle of the Wars of the Roses wasn't Bosworth. Most people think it was. But two years after Richard III died in a ditch, a ten-year-old boy named La…
Ten-year-old Lambert Simnel was crowned King of England in Dublin — a baker's son, coached by a priest, dressed in borrowed robes. Henry VII's army met the York…
Mary, Queen of Scots, disinherited her Protestant son, James VI, and formally named Philip II of Spain as her successor to the English throne. This desperate ga…
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.