Top 20+ Historical Figures Who Had Weird Habits

Brilliance Comes With Odd Rituals

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

The past is full of amazing discoveries, brilliant brains, but also a lot of hidden peculiarities. History often highlights the big battles and ideas, but skips the smaller moments that made key players human. The things a genius did besides experimenting, or how a monarch spent their free hours, reveal more than what meets the eye. Let's step beyond the headlines today and meet 20 historical figures with supposed unusual habits most people could never imagine.

1. Nikola Tesla

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

In the quiet corners of his New York hotel room, Tesla formed emotional ties with pigeons. One, in particular, he claimed was the love of his life. He barely slept, relying on a strict two-hour polyphasic routine to extend his working hours.

2. Winston Churchill

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Leadership during wartime didn’t stop Churchill from sticking to his rituals. He’d often emerge from the bath and dictate speeches completely without clothing. He kept his writing schedule like clockwork, even during bombings. To him, the routine was a battlefield strategy.

3. Ludwig Van Beethoven

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Sixty is how many coffee beans Beethoven counted out before brewing each cup. The man behind stirring symphonies relied on strict rules to keep chaos at bay. His long walks helped bring musical ideas, but it was the tiny rituals that gave him rhythm in life.

4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Strangely open about his inner world, Rousseau confessed in his writings to a lifelong enjoyment of being spanked. Doesn't quite seem like something you'd want to express publicly, but that certainly didn't hold back this historical philosopher.

5. Charles Dickens

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Dickens believed sleeping with his bed facing north aligned his body. But that wasn't his only compulsion. He’d touch objects repeatedly for luck and roamed morgues studying corpses to craft hauntingly real characters. The creative spark was wrapped in superstition and shadow.

6. Pythagoras

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

To Pythagoras, numbers were sacred, and beans were forbidden. His followers adopted many of his peculiar beliefs, including the legume taboo. The reason remains a mystery, yet it’s said he once let himself be killed rather than run through a bean field.

7. Honoré De Balzac

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Balzac’s veins practically ran on caffeine. Pouring cup after cup—up to 50 daily—he believed it unlocked genius. Coffee sent “sparks” through his brain, he wrote. The extreme intake fueled his novels, but his body paid a price few could physically endure.

8. Immanuel Kant

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

This German philosopher lived by a clockwork routine so precise that neighbors set their watches by his afternoon walk. He followed the same schedule daily for decades—writing, eating, walking—rarely deviating. For Kant, predictability wasn’t dull but a philosophical commitment to order over chaos.

9. Napoleon Bonaparte

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

France’s military mastermind kept strange hours—sleeping little and working through the night. He often napped fully dressed and woke ready for orders. Another quirk: he feared cats. Despite commanding armies, he couldn’t stand their presence. Strategy came easy, but felines unnerved him completely.

10. Howard Hughes

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

The aviation tycoon became obsessed with cleanliness, refusing to touch objects without tissues and isolating himself in dark rooms for months. He stored his own urine in jars and trimmed his nails obsessively. Those habits turned his brilliance into a prison of compulsions.

11. Lord Byron

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Cambridge banned pet dogs, so Byron brought a bear. Not just for show, he walked it like a loyal companion. He later even traveled with monkeys and a fox. Byron’s love for animals was extravagant, poetic, and defiantly nonconformist.

12. Catherine The Great

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Russia’s empress never compromised on cleanliness. Even while traveling, she carried a custom-made golden toilet and personalized hygiene tools. Her ritualized grooming and strict routines reflected imperial control over every detail. Cleanliness became a royal habit that followed her across continents.

13. King Ludwig II

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Ludwig built a world of fantasy to live in. He constructed artificial ruins and dreamlike castles and often rode alone through the night in a sleigh under moonlight. Conversations were often with long-dead medieval kings in his imagined court, where reality bent to beauty and loneliness.

14. Salvador Dalí

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Dalí turned daily life into theater. Before speaking, he’d ring a bell to announce himself—a habit as calculated as his mustache. He walked pet anteaters through Paris, calling it performance art. For Dalí, the bizarre wasn’t occasional—it was a ritual he curated obsessively.

15. Tsar Peter The Great

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

To force Russia into modernity, Peter used shock and spectacle. He collected human oddities and insisted nobles watch autopsies to toughen them. He also staged fake executions as pranks. For Peter, transformation required both terror and twisted humor, all in the name of progress.

16. Grigori Rasputin

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Rasputin rarely bathed, believing filth brought him closer to holiness. The mystic claimed sin was necessary for salvation, so he indulged in extremes—fasting, feasting, and womanizing in cycles. His followers called him divine, but his neglect of hygiene became a habit no one forgot.

17. Benjamin Franklin

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Franklin began each day with an “air bath”—standing unclothed by an open window for extended periods. He believed fresh air prevented illness and improved clarity. The ritual became part of his daily routine, blending Enlightenment curiosity with bodily conviction.

18. Alfred Hitchcock

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Eggs horrified him, especially the sight of a broken yolk. Hitchcock called them “repulsive” and never let one touch his lips. Though he made a living by terrifying his audiences, he refused to watch his own films. His fears lived quietly in his carefully guarded routines.

19. Sigmund Freud

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Freud smoked up to 20 cigars a day, calling them essential to his thinking process. He rarely went without one, even during patient sessions. This daily ritual fed his intellect and, eventually, his cancer. For Freud, the habit was both comfort and compulsion.

20. Isaac Newton

1. Nikola Tesla, 2. Winston Churchill, 3. Ludwig Van Beethoven, 4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 5. Charles Dickens, 6. Pythagoras, 7. Honoré De Balzac, 8. Immanuel Kant, 9. Napoleon Bonaparte, 10. Howard Hughes, 11. Lord Byron, 12. Catherine The Great, 13. King Ludwig II, 14. Salvador Dalí, 15. Tsar Peter The Great, 16. Grigori Rasputin, 17. Benjamin Franklin, 18. Alfred Hitchcock, 19. Sigmund Freud, 20. Isaac Newton

Newton’s curiosity didn’t stop at theory—he turned it inward. Self-experimentation became his strangest habit. He once stared at the sun for so long that it damaged his vision, and he even slid needles behind his eye to study optics. He also forgot to eat for days.