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Petre Melikishvili

Petre Melikishvili (Georgian: პეტრე მელიქიშვილი; July 11, 1850 — March 23, 1927) was a Georgian chemist. He was the co-founder of Tbilisi State University (TSU), the first Rector of TSU, Head of the Department of Organic Chemistry (1919-1927), Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences (1927) and Professor at the University of Odessa.[1][2]

Petre Melikishvili
Petre Melikishvili
Born(1850-07-11)July 11, 1850
DiedMarch 23, 1927(1927-03-23) (aged 76)
NationalityGeorgian
Occupation(s)chemist, Scientist

Petre Melikishvili's field of interest in organic chemistry was the synthesis and properties of inorganic peroxide and acids; in inorganic chemistry - the chemistry of glycolic acids and acrylic acids. He also studied meteorite compositions and agricultural issues.[3]

Family edit

 
Stephane Melikishvili — Brother of Petre Melikishvili

Petre Melikishvili's ancestors moved from Adjara to Akhaltsikhe in the 16th century. His parents moved from Akhaltsikhe (Meskheti) to Tbilisi in the 1940s. They settled in the house at 36 Vasil Bebutov Street (now 44 Lado Asatiani Street).

Father Grigol Melikishvili was a public figure and actively participated in the establishment of the first private Georgian printing house in Tbilisi. He sent his eldest son to Vienna to bring printing equipments.[4] Petre Melikishvili's older brother Stefane Melikishvili was the first editor and publisher of the newspaper "Droeba". His younger brother Iosebi was also a publisher, and his sister, Sergei Meskhi's wife, Ekaterine Melikishvili-Meskhi, was a writer, translator and feminist. Ilia Chavchavadze, Akaki Tsereteli, Sergey Meskhi, Niko Nikoladze and other leaders of the Georgian intelligentsia often visited the Melikishvili family.[5]

Early years and Education edit

Petre Melikishvili was born on July 11, 1850, in Tbilisi. His grandmother taught him to read and write. At the age of ten he was sent to the gymnasium, where he was taught by Nikoloz Ghoghoberidze. Petre Melikishvili graduated from the gymnasium with honors in 1868 and under the influence of Besarion Ghoghoberidze chose to study natural sciences. Petre Melikishvili decided to continue his studies in Moscow or St. Petersburg, but due to poor health, doctors prevented him from continuing his studies in Russia. In 1869 he left for Ukraine and enrolled in the Department of Natural Sciences of the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics at the University of Odessa. Vasil Petriashvili (later the rector of Odessa University) also studied in the last year of the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics, with whom Petre Melikishvili soon became friends.[5]

 
Petre Melikishvili

In 1872, Petre Melikishvili graduated from the University two years earlier with honors and remained at the University of Odessa to train as a professor. In the same year he arrived in Tbilisi, where he taught botany for a year at a private women's gymnasium.[4]

In 1873 Petre Melikishvili went abroad on a business trip. For 2 years he was acquainted with the chemical laboratories of Lothar Meyer and Johannes Vilicenus in Tübingen and Karlsruhe. After returning to Ukraine in 1876, he worked as a laboratory assistant at the University of Odessa Chemical Laboratory.

In 1877 Petre Melikishvili started scientific work in organic chemistry. In 1878 he passed the master's examinations at the University of Odessa and began intensive work on products of unsaturated acids. From 1879 to 1880 he published six papers on acrylic acid and related matters.[5]

In 1881, Petre Melikishvili defended his dissertation "Acrylic Acids" for a master's degree, after which he left for Paris, where he attended lectures by the French chemist Marceline Bertha. Petre Melikishvili left France for Munich, where he worked in the laboratory of the German chemist Adolf Bayer.[6]

In 1884 Petre Melikishvili returned to Odessa. In the same year he was appointed Associate Professor of the Department of Agronomic Chemistry at the University. In 1885, Melikishvili defended his dissertation "Isomeric Crotonic Acid Products" and was awarded the degree of Doctor of Chemistry. In the same year he was elected Professor of the Department of Pure Chemistry, and in 1889 he became Professor of the Department. During this period Petre Melikishvili worked on the synthesis of homologous series of acrylic acid and their products.[5]

Scientific Work edit

 
Petre Melikishvili with the students of Odessa Women's Higher Courses

In 1885-1917 Petre Melikishvili was a professor in the Department of Agronomic Chemistry at the University of Novorossiysk.

Petre Melikishvili showed great interest in the emancipation of women. he sent his sister to France to get higher education and was active in getting Georgian women to get higher education abroad. In 1905 he actively participated in the formation of the Odessa Women's Higher Courses. In 1906, the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics was opened for women courses. In October of the same year, Petre Melikishvili was elected dean of the faculty.[5]

In 1923, the 50th anniversary of Petre Melikishvili's pedagogical and scientific-social activity was celebrated. Four years later he was elected a Corresponding Member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences.

Petre Melikishvili owns 85 scientific papers. He mainly worked in two fields: organic chemistry and inorganic chemistry, and after returning to Georgia he worked intensively on agricultural issues. Petre Melikishvili published the first two works while he was still a student in 1872. During this period, the University of Odessa was the leader in the study of azo and azoxy compounds, and Petre Melikishvili also worked mainly on these compounds.[7] In 1875 he published two papers in the field of physical chemistry.

Petre Melikishvili laid the foundation for the creation of chemical terminology in the Georgian language, which was later developed by his students: Nino Tsitsishvili and Rusudan Nikoladze.

Meteorites and Agrochemistry edit

 
Petre Melikishvili with students of Odessa University

In the 1890s, Petre Melikishvili became interested in the nature of meteorites. He studied meteorites which fell in different places, including: Tsmeti, Zabrod, Migey, Vakulov and others. After chemical research of meteorites, it was concluded that they contain the same chemical elements as the Earth. The Migay meteorite differed from others in that it contained coal, sulfur, phosphorus, and organic compounds, namely higher hydrocarbons.

Petre Melikishvili also studied minerals and agricultural products. His field of research included: wine, cheese, tea, etc. As a result of chemical analysis of wine and wheat, he concluded that the quality of these products is influenced by climatic conditions and time. after researching Chakvi tea with M. Rosenblatt, he found that the subtropical climate and soil in western Georgia were suitable for tea plantation cultivation.[5]

Petre Melikishvili owns the following researches: "Chemical composition of Turkish wheat", "Wines of Odessa region", "Investigation of wheat of southern Russia", "Gluten exchange", "Wines of Kherson province", "Chemical composition of Russian sheep cheese", "Analysis of Russian sheep cheese", etc which were published in various editions of the Russian Empire.

In 1896, Petre Melikishvili published a study on natural soda, in which the issue of its formation was discussed.[7]

Inorganic Chemistry edit

 
Petre Melikishvili in the Chemistry Lab with students

In 1897 Petre Melikishvili started working in the field of inorganic chemistry and wrote more than 20 papers in this field. The Russian Academy of Sciences has published these studies under the title "Peroxides and Super Acids". Petre Melikishvili was awarded the Lomonosov Gold Medal together with Lev Pisarzhevsky for these examinations. According to Dmitry Mendeleev, their works "perfected the periodic table of the chemical elements."[5]

In Tbilisi State University edit

At the suggestion of Ivane Javakhishvili, on January 13, 1918, Petre Melikishvili was elected the first rector of Tbilisi State University. He did not receive a salary during his tenure as rector. [6] [8] Petre Melikishvili gave lectures and set up laboratories at the Faculty of Natural Sciences. In 1918, he founded the Department of Chemistry, which he headed, and then it was divided into two departments, the Department of Inorganic Chemistry (headed by Jason Moseshvili) and the Department of Organic Chemistry, which he headed.[5]

In 1919 Petre Melikishvili and the Dean of the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences Andrea Razmadze argued. Petre Melikishvili applied for the resignation,[9] however, he continued to work in the Department of Organic Chemistry and headed the newly established Faculty of Agriculture of the University.

Death and Inheritance edit

 
Petre Melikishvili

Petre Melikishvili was a lonely man. He avoided political activities, including administrative positions.

Petre Melikishvili died on March 23, 1927, at the age of 77. He is buried in the yard of Tbilisi State University. Petre Melikishvili was the first professor to be buried in the university yard. A year later, a monument created by Iakob Nikoladze was erected in the Pantheon.[10]

The Petre Melikishvili Prize exists at the Georgian National Academy of Sciences. There is a scholarship, an auditorium and a cabinet-library named after him at Tbilisi State University. The first rector's desk and personal belongings are kept in the University Museum. The original photos of Petre Melikishvili's personal fund are kept in the Odessa regional archive. Electronic versions are kept in the Museum of Tbilisi State University.

Petre Melikishvili Street is located in Tbilisi. Institute of Physical and Organic Chemistry is named after him.

Organizations and Associations edit

  • Tbilisi State University, Founder, Rector (1918-1919)
  • Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Corresponding Member (1927-)
  • Georgian Scientific School of Chemistry, founder

Awards edit

References edit

  1. ^ Меликов Пётр Григорьевич, статья в Большой советской энциклопедии
  2. ^ Меликишвили (Меликов) Петр Григорьевич на сайте Архивов РАН
  3. ^ Toradze, M (2015). Petre Melikishvili: First rector of university. Publicistic essays, 2. Tbilisi: Tbilisi State University. pp. 29-31.
  4. ^ a b Shalamberidze, M. (1923). Petre Melikishvili (1873-1923). Tbilissi. pp. 11-12.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Gverdstsiteli, I. (1975). Petre Giorgi Melikishvili: Life and work. Tbilisi: Tbilisi University Publishing House. pp. 3-14.
  6. ^ a b Gaiparashvili, Z.. (2020). University (Fifth Edition). Tbilisi: Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University Publishing House. ISBN 978-9941-13-922-2. pp. 44-46.
  7. ^ a b Gverdtsiteli, I. (1975). Petre Melikishvili: life and work. Tbilisi: Tbilisi University publishing house. pp. 15-30.
  8. ^ Jorbenadze, S. (1988). A brief history of Tbilisi University. Tbilisi: Tbilisi University Publishing House. pp. 40
  9. ^ Toradze, M. (2015). Petre Melikishvili: First rector of university. Publicist Essays, 2. Tbilisi: Tbilisi State University. pp. 29-31.
  10. ^ Gaiparashvili, Z. (2005). Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University Pantheon. Tbilisi: Publisher „Universali“. p. 2.

Bibliography edit

  • "The chemical composition of our wine." Tbilisi (Georgia): Printing house of the Ministry of Defense. 1920.

Further reading edit

  • Gverdtsiteli, I. (1975). Petre Grigoli Melikishvili: Life and Work. Tbilisi: Tbilisi University Publishing House.
  • Toradze, M. (2015). Petre Melikishvili: First Rector of the University. Publicist Essays, 2. Tbilisi: Tbilisi State University.
  • Menagarishvili, A. (April 12, 1968). The first rector of the university, the great caretaker of agriculture. Tbilisi University. №13 (284).
  • Pirtskhalava, N. (April 12, 1968). The great Georgian scientist P. C. Melikishvili. Tbilisi University. №13 (284).
  • Shalamberidze, M. (1923). Petre Melikishvili (1873-1923). Tbilissi.
  • Tsuladze, E. (1953). Two chemists. Tbilisi: Publishing House and Printing House of the Georgian Academy of Sciences.

External links edit

  • Image of Petre Melikishvili
  • Petre Melikishvili 2018-05-15 at the Wayback MachineTSU
  • Collection of Petre Melikisvhili

petre, melikishvili, georgian, პეტრე, მელიქიშვილი, july, 1850, march, 1927, georgian, chemist, founder, tbilisi, state, university, first, rector, head, department, organic, chemistry, 1919, 1927, corresponding, member, ussr, academy, sciences, 1927, professor. Petre Melikishvili Georgian პეტრე მელიქიშვილი July 11 1850 March 23 1927 was a Georgian chemist He was the co founder of Tbilisi State University TSU the first Rector of TSU Head of the Department of Organic Chemistry 1919 1927 Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences 1927 and Professor at the University of Odessa 1 2 Petre MelikishviliPetre MelikishviliBorn 1850 07 11 July 11 1850Tbilisi Russian EmpireDiedMarch 23 1927 1927 03 23 aged 76 Tbilisi Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic Soviet UnionNationalityGeorgianOccupation s chemist Scientist Petre Melikishvili s field of interest in organic chemistry was the synthesis and properties of inorganic peroxide and acids in inorganic chemistry the chemistry of glycolic acids and acrylic acids He also studied meteorite compositions and agricultural issues 3 Contents 1 Family 2 Early years and Education 3 Scientific Work 3 1 Meteorites and Agrochemistry 3 2 Inorganic Chemistry 4 In Tbilisi State University 5 Death and Inheritance 6 Organizations and Associations 7 Awards 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksFamily edit nbsp Stephane Melikishvili Brother of Petre Melikishvili Petre Melikishvili s ancestors moved from Adjara to Akhaltsikhe in the 16th century His parents moved from Akhaltsikhe Meskheti to Tbilisi in the 1940s They settled in the house at 36 Vasil Bebutov Street now 44 Lado Asatiani Street Father Grigol Melikishvili was a public figure and actively participated in the establishment of the first private Georgian printing house in Tbilisi He sent his eldest son to Vienna to bring printing equipments 4 Petre Melikishvili s older brother Stefane Melikishvili was the first editor and publisher of the newspaper Droeba His younger brother Iosebi was also a publisher and his sister Sergei Meskhi s wife Ekaterine Melikishvili Meskhi was a writer translator and feminist Ilia Chavchavadze Akaki Tsereteli Sergey Meskhi Niko Nikoladze and other leaders of the Georgian intelligentsia often visited the Melikishvili family 5 Early years and Education editPetre Melikishvili was born on July 11 1850 in Tbilisi His grandmother taught him to read and write At the age of ten he was sent to the gymnasium where he was taught by Nikoloz Ghoghoberidze Petre Melikishvili graduated from the gymnasium with honors in 1868 and under the influence of Besarion Ghoghoberidze chose to study natural sciences Petre Melikishvili decided to continue his studies in Moscow or St Petersburg but due to poor health doctors prevented him from continuing his studies in Russia In 1869 he left for Ukraine and enrolled in the Department of Natural Sciences of the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics at the University of Odessa Vasil Petriashvili later the rector of Odessa University also studied in the last year of the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics with whom Petre Melikishvili soon became friends 5 nbsp Petre Melikishvili In 1872 Petre Melikishvili graduated from the University two years earlier with honors and remained at the University of Odessa to train as a professor In the same year he arrived in Tbilisi where he taught botany for a year at a private women s gymnasium 4 In 1873 Petre Melikishvili went abroad on a business trip For 2 years he was acquainted with the chemical laboratories of Lothar Meyer and Johannes Vilicenus in Tubingen and Karlsruhe After returning to Ukraine in 1876 he worked as a laboratory assistant at the University of Odessa Chemical Laboratory In 1877 Petre Melikishvili started scientific work in organic chemistry In 1878 he passed the master s examinations at the University of Odessa and began intensive work on products of unsaturated acids From 1879 to 1880 he published six papers on acrylic acid and related matters 5 In 1881 Petre Melikishvili defended his dissertation Acrylic Acids for a master s degree after which he left for Paris where he attended lectures by the French chemist Marceline Bertha Petre Melikishvili left France for Munich where he worked in the laboratory of the German chemist Adolf Bayer 6 In 1884 Petre Melikishvili returned to Odessa In the same year he was appointed Associate Professor of the Department of Agronomic Chemistry at the University In 1885 Melikishvili defended his dissertation Isomeric Crotonic Acid Products and was awarded the degree of Doctor of Chemistry In the same year he was elected Professor of the Department of Pure Chemistry and in 1889 he became Professor of the Department During this period Petre Melikishvili worked on the synthesis of homologous series of acrylic acid and their products 5 Scientific Work edit nbsp Petre Melikishvili with the students of Odessa Women s Higher Courses In 1885 1917 Petre Melikishvili was a professor in the Department of Agronomic Chemistry at the University of Novorossiysk Petre Melikishvili showed great interest in the emancipation of women he sent his sister to France to get higher education and was active in getting Georgian women to get higher education abroad In 1905 he actively participated in the formation of the Odessa Women s Higher Courses In 1906 the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics was opened for women courses In October of the same year Petre Melikishvili was elected dean of the faculty 5 In 1923 the 50th anniversary of Petre Melikishvili s pedagogical and scientific social activity was celebrated Four years later he was elected a Corresponding Member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences Petre Melikishvili owns 85 scientific papers He mainly worked in two fields organic chemistry and inorganic chemistry and after returning to Georgia he worked intensively on agricultural issues Petre Melikishvili published the first two works while he was still a student in 1872 During this period the University of Odessa was the leader in the study of azo and azoxy compounds and Petre Melikishvili also worked mainly on these compounds 7 In 1875 he published two papers in the field of physical chemistry Petre Melikishvili laid the foundation for the creation of chemical terminology in the Georgian language which was later developed by his students Nino Tsitsishvili and Rusudan Nikoladze Meteorites and Agrochemistry edit nbsp Petre Melikishvili with students of Odessa University In the 1890s Petre Melikishvili became interested in the nature of meteorites He studied meteorites which fell in different places including Tsmeti Zabrod Migey Vakulov and others After chemical research of meteorites it was concluded that they contain the same chemical elements as the Earth The Migay meteorite differed from others in that it contained coal sulfur phosphorus and organic compounds namely higher hydrocarbons Petre Melikishvili also studied minerals and agricultural products His field of research included wine cheese tea etc As a result of chemical analysis of wine and wheat he concluded that the quality of these products is influenced by climatic conditions and time after researching Chakvi tea with M Rosenblatt he found that the subtropical climate and soil in western Georgia were suitable for tea plantation cultivation 5 Petre Melikishvili owns the following researches Chemical composition of Turkish wheat Wines of Odessa region Investigation of wheat of southern Russia Gluten exchange Wines of Kherson province Chemical composition of Russian sheep cheese Analysis of Russian sheep cheese etc which were published in various editions of the Russian Empire In 1896 Petre Melikishvili published a study on natural soda in which the issue of its formation was discussed 7 Inorganic Chemistry edit nbsp Petre Melikishvili in the Chemistry Lab with students In 1897 Petre Melikishvili started working in the field of inorganic chemistry and wrote more than 20 papers in this field The Russian Academy of Sciences has published these studies under the title Peroxides and Super Acids Petre Melikishvili was awarded the Lomonosov Gold Medal together with Lev Pisarzhevsky for these examinations According to Dmitry Mendeleev their works perfected the periodic table of the chemical elements 5 In Tbilisi State University editAt the suggestion of Ivane Javakhishvili on January 13 1918 Petre Melikishvili was elected the first rector of Tbilisi State University He did not receive a salary during his tenure as rector 6 8 Petre Melikishvili gave lectures and set up laboratories at the Faculty of Natural Sciences In 1918 he founded the Department of Chemistry which he headed and then it was divided into two departments the Department of Inorganic Chemistry headed by Jason Moseshvili and the Department of Organic Chemistry which he headed 5 In 1919 Petre Melikishvili and the Dean of the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences Andrea Razmadze argued Petre Melikishvili applied for the resignation 9 however he continued to work in the Department of Organic Chemistry and headed the newly established Faculty of Agriculture of the University Death and Inheritance edit nbsp Petre Melikishvili Petre Melikishvili was a lonely man He avoided political activities including administrative positions Petre Melikishvili died on March 23 1927 at the age of 77 He is buried in the yard of Tbilisi State University Petre Melikishvili was the first professor to be buried in the university yard A year later a monument created by Iakob Nikoladze was erected in the Pantheon 10 The Petre Melikishvili Prize exists at the Georgian National Academy of Sciences There is a scholarship an auditorium and a cabinet library named after him at Tbilisi State University The first rector s desk and personal belongings are kept in the University Museum The original photos of Petre Melikishvili s personal fund are kept in the Odessa regional archive Electronic versions are kept in the Museum of Tbilisi State University Petre Melikishvili Street is located in Tbilisi Institute of Physical and Organic Chemistry is named after him Organizations and Associations editTbilisi State University Founder Rector 1918 1919 Academy of Sciences of the USSR Corresponding Member 1927 Georgian Scientific School of Chemistry founderAwards editMikhail Lomonosov Gold Medal 1899 References edit Melikov Pyotr Grigorevich statya v Bolshoj sovetskoj enciklopedii Melikishvili Melikov Petr Grigorevich na sajte Arhivov RAN Toradze M 2015 Petre Melikishvili First rector of university Publicistic essays 2 Tbilisi Tbilisi State University pp 29 31 a b Shalamberidze M 1923 Petre Melikishvili 1873 1923 Tbilissi pp 11 12 a b c d e f g h Gverdstsiteli I 1975 Petre Giorgi Melikishvili Life and work Tbilisi Tbilisi University Publishing House pp 3 14 a b Gaiparashvili Z 2020 University Fifth Edition Tbilisi Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University Publishing House ISBN 978 9941 13 922 2 pp 44 46 a b Gverdtsiteli I 1975 Petre Melikishvili life and work Tbilisi Tbilisi University publishing house pp 15 30 Jorbenadze S 1988 A brief history of Tbilisi University Tbilisi Tbilisi University Publishing House pp 40 Toradze M 2015 Petre Melikishvili First rector of university Publicist Essays 2 Tbilisi Tbilisi State University pp 29 31 Gaiparashvili Z 2005 Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University Pantheon Tbilisi Publisher Universali p 2 Bibliography edit The chemical composition of our wine Tbilisi Georgia Printing house of the Ministry of Defense 1920 Further reading editGverdtsiteli I 1975 Petre Grigoli Melikishvili Life and Work Tbilisi Tbilisi University Publishing House Toradze M 2015 Petre Melikishvili First Rector of the University Publicist Essays 2 Tbilisi Tbilisi State University Menagarishvili A April 12 1968 The first rector of the university the great caretaker of agriculture Tbilisi University 13 284 Pirtskhalava N April 12 1968 The great Georgian scientist P C Melikishvili Tbilisi University 13 284 Shalamberidze M 1923 Petre Melikishvili 1873 1923 Tbilissi Tsuladze E 1953 Two chemists Tbilisi Publishing House and Printing House of the Georgian Academy of Sciences External links editImage of Petre Melikishvili Petre MelikishviliArchived 2018 05 15 at the Wayback Machine TSU Collection of Petre Melikisvhili Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Petre Melikishvili amp oldid 1181823294, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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