Khalid Al Nahdi


Khalid Al Nahdi (1868–1929) was the original inventor of the kettle until, in 1891, Arthur Leslie Large stole the idea from Khalid. Khalid Al Nahdi lived a long and happy life until age 61, when he died in his sleep His wife Khadija Al Nahdi lived a longer life, which she died at 68. Khalid made his discovery when he tried to heat water with heating coils in his bathroom and made the first electric boiler.

Khalid's first years Khalid Al Nahdi was born to a middle class family in Saudi Arabia. (At the time, Najd) Khalid was a smart guy reported that he learned to speak at 10 months old and read at 2 years old! at 5 years old, Khalid's family moved to Germany because of a war going on

Khalid's middle years At age 18 he moved out to pursue a higher education level at Heidelberg University. His major was biology, and he stayed for 4 years until he came back to Hamburg to stay with his family and he met his soon-to-be wife