HISTORY OF RUBIKS CUBE
Monday, August 25th, 2008Erno Rubik was born in Budapest, Hungary during World War II. His
mother was a poet, his father an aircraft engineer who started a
company to build gliders. Rubik studied sculpture in college, but after
graduating, he went back to learn architecture at a small college
called the Academy of Applied Arts and Design. He remained there after
his studies to teach interior design.
The Cube
Rubik’s initial attraction to inventing the Cube was not in producing
the best selling toy puzzle in history. The structural design problem
interested Rubik; he asked, "How could the blocks move independently
without falling apart?" In Rubik’s Cube, twenty-six individual little
cubes or cubies make up the big Cube. Each layer of nine cubies can
twist and the layers can overlap. Any three squares in a row, except
diagonally, can join a new layer. Rubik’s initial attempt to use
elastic bands failed, his solution was to have the blocks hold
themselves together by their shape. Rubik hand carved and assembled the
little cubies together. He marked each side of the big Cube with
adhesive paper of a different color, and started twisting.
An Inventor Dreams
"It was wonderful, to see how, after only a few turns, the colors
became mixed, apparently in random fashion. It was tremendously
satisfying to watch this color parade. Like after a nice walk when you
have seen many lovely sights you decide to go home, after a while I
decided it was time to go home, let us put the cubes back in order. And
it was at that moment that I came face to face with the Big Challenge:
What is the way home?" - Erno Rubik
That was how the Cube as a puzzle, was invented in the spring of 1974,
when the twenty-nine year old Rubik discovered it was not so easy to
realign the colors to match on all six sides. He was not sure he would
ever be able to return his invention to its original position. He
theorized that by randomly twisting the Cube he would never be able to
fix it in a lifetime, which later turns out to be more than correct. He
began working out a solution, starting with aligning the eight corner
cubies. He discovered certain sequences of moves for rearranging just a
few cubies at a time. Within a month, he had the puzzle solved and an
amazing journey lay ahead..
First Patent
Rubik applied for his Hungarian patent in January 1975 and left his
invention with a small toy making cooperative in Budapest. The patent
approval finally came in early 1977 and the first Cubes appeared at the
end of 1977. By this time, Erno Rubik was married.
Two other people applied for similar patents at about the same time as
Rubik. Terutoshi Ishige applied a year after Rubik, for a Japanese
patent on a very similar cube. An American, Larry Nichols, patented a
cube before Rubik, held together with magnets. Nichols’ toy was
rejected by all toy companies, including the Ideal Toy Corporation,
which later bought the rights to Rubik’s Cube.