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Famous Babies
Little Caesar
Science Baby Steps
100

Baby ducks waddle, and you might want to do this to your infant. You'll need a blanket!

Swaddle

100

Baby One More Time

Britney Spears

100

These twins played Michelle Tanner on the 1990s sitcom Full House, starting at just 6 months old. Their younger sister now stars as Scarlet Witch.

Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen

100

Pliny the Elder suggested that this Roman leader’s name came from an ancestor delivered by a Caesarean section, though the claim is debated. He, himself, was almost certainly not.

Julius Caesar

100

This scientist’s careful watching of falling apples and planets was the “baby step” that led him to formulate the laws of motion.

Isaac Newton

200

You might savor a celebratory rib after the baby arrives, but when it comes to sleep, you’ll be placing your newborn here—always on his back.

Crib

200

Ice Ice Baby

Vanilla Ice

200

This became famous thanks to the 1990s TV show Ally McBeal, arguably becoming the very first meme.

Dancing Baby

200

This title, used for German and Austrian emperors, comes from the Latin pronunciation of Caesar. Also, a tasty hard roll bread.

Kaiser

200

In the late 70s, Louise Brown took her baby steps, but represented a giant leap in reproductive science as the first child conceived through this method.

In Vitro Fertilization

300

Babies nap a lot, and changing them gives you practice doing and undoing these small fasteners.

Snap

300

Baby

Justin Bieber

300

The 1932 abduction of this baby became one of the most infamous crimes of the 20th century.

Lindbergh Baby

300

Cleopatra’s alleged son with Julius Caesar earned this nickname, which literally means “Little Caesar.”

Caesarion

300

This scientist took an early “baby step” in statistics by noticing that children of tall parents tend to be slightly shorter than their parents.

Francis Galton

400

Your baby will coo adorably, but you won’t be doing this for them until at least four months.

Cook

400

Baby Shark

Pinkfong

400

While her father did have a son, the lack of more baby boys eventually led to this queen’s ascension, who was a great patron of the arts, including Shakespeare.

Elizabeth I

400

Little Caesar’s 1990s mascot made this catchphrase famous while flipping a pizza on an apparent pike.

“Pizza! Pizza!”

400

Taking baby steps into computing, this 19th-century mathematician is often called the “first computer programmer.”

Ada Lovelace

500

Making your bed might take a backseat, but you'll be doing a lot of this, as you lift your baby in and out of their sleep space.

Bend

500

Baby Boy

Beyonce

500

This Henry became king at just 8 months old; he’s not the one with eight wives—he only married once, Margaret of Anjou.

Henry VI

500

Named for Julius Caesar, but not quite a “Little Caesar,” this “Little Boot” emperor once planned to make his horse a consul.

Caligula

500

Their initial “baby step” was building models of base pairing before confirming the full double helix structure.

Watson and Crick