| Alfred Nobel |
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Physics - Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Chemistry - Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Physiology or Medicine - Nobel Assembly at the Karolinska Institute Literature - Swedish Academy Peace - Norwegian Nobel Committee Alfred Nobel (1833-96) was a Swedish industrialist and inventor who harnessed the unstable nature of nitroglycerine, a powerful explosive, by mixing it with silica to form a more stable solid which he named dynamite. He patented this product and marketed it successfully, building factories in many countries and retiring a very rich man. His interests were wide-ranging in literature and social issues as well as in the sciences, and are reflected in the subject areas of the prizes.
Philately would be the poorer without the Nobel prizes which provide an instant recognition factor. The Swedish postal service excels in chronicling the achievements of the laureates, and many other countries follow suit in honoring their own nationals. The United States Postal Service is slow off the mark in drawing attention to the many Americans whose achievements have dominated their fields. One must be dead ten years to appear on a U.S. stamp, and even with this restriction many of our finest science laureates are still not recognized, except for Einstein and Millikan. The stamp booklet issued on the 100th anniversary of the date of Nobel's last will and testament shows a fragment of that document, the Paris mansion that was Nobel's home, a laboratory at Bjorkborn, and the occasion of of the award of the first Nobel prize in physics to Roentgen in 1901. |