Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Alfred Nobel Essay example -- essays research papers
 Alfred Nobel      Alfred Nobel was born in Stockholm, Sweden on October 21, 1833.(Encarta) His  father Immanuel Nobel was an engineer and inventor who built bridges and  buildings in Stockholm. In connection with his construction work Immanuel Nobel  also experimented with different techniques of blasting rock. Alfred's mother,  Andrietta Ahlsell came from a wealthy family. Due to misfortunes in the  construction work caused by the loss of some barges of building material,  Immanuel Nobel was forced into bankruptcy the same year Alfred Nobel was born.  In 1837, Immanuel Nobel left Stockholm and his family to start a new career in  Finland and in Russia. To support the family, Andrietta Nobel started a grocery  store which provided a modest income. Meanwhile Immanuel Nobel was successful in  his new enterprise in St. Petersburg, Russia. He started a mechanical workshop  which provided equipment for the Russian army and he also convinced the Tsar and  his generals that naval mines could be used to block enemy naval ships from  threatening the city. The naval mines designed by Immanuel Nobel were simple  devices consisting of submerged wooden casks filled with gun powder. Anchored  below the surface of the Gulf of Finland they effectively deterred the British  Royal Navy from moving into firing range of St. Petersburg during the Crimean  war (1853-1856).    Immanuel Nobel was also a pioneer in arms manufacture and in designing steam  engines. Successful in his industrial and business ventures, Immanuel Nobel was  able, in 1842, to bring his family to St. Petersburg. There, his sons were given  a first class education by private teachers. The training included natural  sciences, languages and literature. By the age of 17, Alfred Nobel was fluent in  Swedish, Russian, French, English and German. His primary interests were in  English literature and poetry as well as in chemistry and physics. Alfred's  father, who wanted his sons to join his enterprise as engineers, disliked  Alfred's interest in poetry and found his son rather introverted. In order to  widen Alfred's horizons his father sent him abroad for further training in  chemical engineering. During a two year period, Alfred Nobel visited Sweden,  Germany, France and the United States.(Schuck p. 113) In Paris, the city he  came to like best, he worked in the private laboratory of Professor T.J. Pelouze,  a famous chemist. There he met the y...              ...e Bjà ¶rkborn Manor became his Swedish  home.    Alfred Nobel died in San Remo, Italy, on December 10, 1896. When his will was  opened it came as a surprise that his fortune was to be used for Prizes in  Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature and Peace. The executors  of his will were two young engineers, Ragnar Sohlman and Rudolf Lilljequist.  They set about forming the Nobel Foundation as an organization to take care of  the financial assets left by Nobel for this purpose and to coordinate the work  of the Prize-Awarding Institutions. This was not without its difficulties since  the will was contested by relatives and questioned by authorities in various  countries.    But as we all know, the legacy of Alfred Nobel lives on today. The prizes named  after him are still the most coveted prizes for the recipients in their  respective fields. Everyone will remember Alfred Nobel as a daring pioneer who  knew no limits.    Many of the new advanced scientific discoveries made in the last century were  surely helped out by the work of Nobel. His Nobel prizes reward people of  science and enable them to keep churning out new ways of accomplishing new feats  that have never been attempted before                       
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