Istorio

Jöns Jacob Berzelius

Father of chemistry

Father of chemistry

arabera
Europeana Foundation

On 20 August 1779, a boy was born without whom I couldn't have written and shared this blog post. His name was Jöns Jacob Berzelius and he's considered as one of the fathers of modern chemistry.

Jacob's parents died when he was young so he was raised by relatives in Linköping, Sweden, where he attended the Cathedral School. In 1796, he went to Uppsala University to become a doctor of medicine.

black and white illustration portrait of Berzelius.

After graduating he worked for a while in Stockholm as a doctor. Industrialist Wilhelm Hisinger noticed his analytical abilities and sponsored him with a laboratory. His house-keeper Anna Sundström managed the lab and, in time, she was to become the first female chemist in Sweden!

So why couldn't I have blogged this without Berzelius?

During his career Berzelius discovered many elements. One of those elements, which he discovered and isolated in 1824 and called Silicium, which today is known as Silicon.

The uses of silicon are many, but perhaps most fundamental for our age is its use in semiconductors and integrated circuits and which forms the tiny building blocks of the processor powering the computer on which I write this blog post.

black and white photograph of a statue in a park.

As befitting a 'father of chemistry', many of his books and letters are available in Europeana.

You can catch a sample below or get a list of all of them here. By the way, there are three other 19th century chemists who are also considered fathers of modern chemistry - do you know their names?

black and white title page of a book.
black and white title page of a book.
colour photograph of an archive folder.
scan of a hand-written letter.