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Marie Skłodowska-Curie, photo Henri Manuel, ok. 1920
Licence: public domain, Source: Wikimedia Commons, Conditions d\'autorisation
Photo montrant Maria Skłodowska-Curie
ID: OS-001013-P

Maria Skłodowska-Curie

First name:
Maria
Last Name:
Skłodowska-Curie
Parents:
Władysław, Bronisława
Date of birth:
07-11-1867
Place of birth:
Warszawa
Date of death:
04-07-1934
Place od death:
Passy
Age:
66
Profession:
chemist, physicist
Biography:

Maria Skłodowska-Curie (1867-1934), born in Warsaw, daughter of Władysław and Bronisława Boguska. From the beginning of her education she was an able pupil. At the age of sixteen, her mother and sister died of typhoid fever. These events shook the young Maria and contributed to her becoming an atheist and deepening her belief in the validity and sublimity of science. Young Maria was also heavily influenced by positivist ideas, with which she and her two sisters Bronia and Helena were introduced by Bronisława Piasecka, a teacher. Maria moved to Paris in 1891, following in the footsteps of her sister Bronisława. There, she took up mathematics and physics at the Sorbonne. At that time, she also attended the theatre to learn acting. In 1893, she received a bachelor's degree in physics and mathematics. In 1897, Marie undertook research into the radiation produced by uranium salts. During the course of her research, she was joined by her researcher husband, also a scientist, Pierre Curie. In the course of their research, they succeeded in isolating a hitherto unknown chemical element, which was named Polonium in honour of Poland. For this discovery, they received many awards and considerable recognition in the scientific world. In 1903. Marie and Pierre Curie were jointly awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics with Becquerel. In 1906. Skłodowska began lecturing at the Sorbonne, becoming the first woman professor in the history of that university. She succeeded her previously deceased husband there. She greatly survived this loss, devoting herself entirely to her work. In 1911, Marie was not admitted to the French Academy of Sciences because of gender discrimination. By then she was already a Nobel laureate, a three-time laureate of the Academy of Sciences in Paris, held honorary doctorates from universities in Edinburgh, Geneva, Manchester, among others, and was also a member of the Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg, Bologna, Prague, and a member of the Academy of Skills in Krakow. 7 November 1911. Maria received her second Nobel Prize, in chemistry, for the discovery of polonium and radium. Numerous films, plays, monuments, stamps, and coins have been created in honour of Marie Skłodowska-Curie.

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