Valentin Rose (pharmacologist)

Valentin Rose the Younger (30 October 1762 – 9 August 1807) was a German pharmacologist from Berlin, Margraviate of Brandenburg. Son of Valentin Rose the Elder (1736–1771).

Beginning in 1778, he spent four years as a pharmacy apprentice in Frankfurt am Main, afterwards returning to Berlin, where he worked as an assistant at his late father's pharmacy. In Berlin, he attended lectures given by Johann Gottlieb Gleditsch and Martin Klaproth at the Collegium Medico-chirurgicum. In 1785 he became provisor of his father's pharmacy, of which he gained ownership of in 1791.[1]

He is credited with the discoveries of sodium bicarbonate (1801) and inulin (1807, from elecampane root). He also developed a method for the detection of arsenic to be used in criminal investigations.[2] With Adolf Ferdinand Gehlen, he was an editor of the "Berlinisches Jahrbuch für die Pharmacie und für die damit verhundenen Wissenschaften".[1][3]

Children

He had two children who were both famous scientists: Heinrich Rose (1795–1864) and Gustav Rose (1798–1873). The classicist Valentin Rose and the surgeon Edmund Rose were Gustav Rose's children.[4]

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gollark: And have all words go through neural network driven rewriting to remove all emotional content.
gollark: And yet you didn't want me as owner.
gollark: Perhaps politicians could be required to have all voice be run through speech synthesis which removes all emotion.
gollark: I don't know.

References

  1. translated biography at NDB/ADB Deutsche Biographie
  2. Valentin Rose (1806) "Ueber das zweckmäßigste Verfahren, um bei Vergiftungen mit Arsenik letzern aufzufinden und darzustellen" (On the most effective method, in cases of poisoning with arsenic, to discover and show the later), Journal für Chemie und Physik, 2 : 665-671.
  3. WorldCat Identities Berlinisches Jahrbuch für die Pharmacie, 1795-1840. Edited successively by V. Rose, A.F. Gehlen, J.W. Doebereiner, C.W.G. Kastner, G.H. Stoltze, W. Meissner, A. Lucae, and A.W. Lindes./ Bd. 1-43
  4. Weeks, Mary Elvira (1956). The discovery of the elements (6th ed.). Easton, PA: Journal of Chemical Education.


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