Karlsruhe Congress

{{short description|International meeting of chemists in 1860}}

File:Kekule acetic acid formulae.jpg in 1861]]

The Karlsruhe Congress was an international meeting of chemists organized by August Kekulé and held in Karlsruhe, Germany from 3 to 5 September 1860. It was the first international conference of chemistry with 140 participants.

The conference is known for the adoption of atomic weights in chemistry motivated by the participation of Stanislao Cannizzaro. During the congress he showed evidence using Avogadro's hypothesis, that certain gases were not made of atoms but of diatomic molecules.

It has been argued{{cite journal |author=Ihde, Aaron J. |year=1961 |title=The Karlsruhe Congress: A Centennial Retrospective |url=http://search.jce.divched.org/JCEIndex/FMPro?-db=jceindex.fp5&-lay=wwwform&combo=karlsruhe&-find=&-format=detail.html&-skip=0&-max=1&-token.2=0&-token.3=10 |journal=Journal of Chemical Education |volume=38 |issue=2 |pages=83–86 |bibcode=1961JChEd..38...83I |doi=10.1021/ed038p83|url-access=subscription }}{{dead link|date=May 2017|bot=InternetArchiveBot|fix-attempted=yes}} (subscription required) that the Karlsruhe meeting was the first international meeting of chemists and that it led to the eventual founding of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC).

Organization and invitation

The Karlsruhe Congress was called so that European chemists could discuss matters of chemical nomenclature, notation, and atomic weights. The organization, invitation, and sponsorship of the conference were handled by August Kekulé, Adolphe Wurtz, and Karl Weltzien.{{cite book | last = Leicester | first = Henry M. | title = The Historical Background of Chemistry | publisher = John Wiley and Sons | year = 1956 | pages = 191–192 | isbn = 978-0-486-61053-5 }} As an example of the problems facing the delegates, Kekulé's Lehrbuch der Organischen Chemie gave nineteen different formulas used by chemists for acetic acid, as shown in the figure on this page.{{cite book | last = Kekulé | first = A. | title = Lehrbuch der Organischen Chemie … , vol. 1 | publisher = Ferdinand Enke | place = Erlangen, (Germany) | year = 1861 | page = 58 | language = de |url = https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101058262955;view=1up;seq=72}}The French chemist Auguste Laurent also listed many different contemporary representations of acetic acid (acide acétique) in his book: {{cite book|last1=Laurent|first1=Auguste|title=Méthode de Chimie|date=1854|publisher=Mallet-Bachelier|location=Paris, France|pages=[https://archive.org/details/mthodedechimie00laurgoog/page/n440 27]–28|url=https://archive.org/details/mthodedechimie00laurgoog|language=fr}}

An understanding was reached on the time and place of the meeting, and printing of a circular addressed to European chemists listed below, which explained the objectives and goals of an international congress was agreed upon. The circular concluded: "...with the aim of avoiding any unfortunate omissions, the undersigned request that the individuals to whom this circular will be sent please communicate it to their scientist friends who are duly authorized to attend the planned conference."{{Cite web|url=http://web.lemoyne.edu/~GIUNTA/karlsruhe.html|title=Charles-Adolphe Wurtz|website=web.lemoyne.edu|access-date=2019-07-01}}

The circular of the conference was sent to:

class="wikitable"

|+

!Country

!City

!Scientists

rowspan="3" |Austria

|Innsbruck

|Heinrich Hlasiwetz

rowspan="2" |Vienna

|Anton Schrötter von Kristelli

Leopold von Pebal
rowspan="2" |Belgium

|Brussels

|Jean Servais Stas

Ghent

|Friedrich August Kekule von Stradonitz

rowspan="14" |France

| rowspan="13" |Paris

|Anselme Payen

Antoine Bussy
Antoine Jérôme Balard
Auguste André Thomas Cahours
Charles Adolphe Wurtz
Edmond Frémy
Eugéne-Melchior Péligot
Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville
Henri Victor Regnault
Jean-Baptiste Boussingault
Jean-Baptiste Dumas
Louis Pasteur
Théophile-Jules Pelouze.
Rennes

|Faustino Malaguti

rowspan="11" |Germany

|Berlin

|Eilhard Mitscherlich

Freiburg im Breisgau

|Lambert Henrich von Babo

rowspan="2" |Giessen

|{{ill|Heinrich Will|de|Heinrich Will (Chemiker)}}

Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp
Göttingen

|Friedrich Wöhler

Heidelberg

|Robert Bunsen

Karlsruhe

|Karl Weltzien

Leipzig

|Otto Linné Erdmann

Munich

|Justus von Liebig

Stuttgart

|Hermann von Fehling

Tübingen

|Adolph Strecker

rowspan="2" |Italy

|Genova

|Stanislao Cannizzaro

Turin

|Raffaele Piria

rowspan="5" |Russia

|Kasan

|Nikolay Nikolayevich Beketov

rowspan="4" |St. Petersburg

|Alexander Nikolayevich Engelhardt

Carl Julius Fritzsche
Nikolai Nikolaevich Sokolov{{Cite journal |last=Brooks |first=Nathan M. |date=1995-11-01 |title=Russian chemistry in the 1850s: A failed attempt at institutionalization |journal=Annals of Science |volume=52 |issue=6 |pages=577–589 |doi=10.1080/00033799500200411 |issn=0003-3790}}
Nikolay Nikolaevich Zinin
rowspan="2" |Switzerland

|Geneva

|Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac

Zurich

|Georg Andreas Karl Staedeler

rowspan="6" |United Kingdom

| rowspan="4" |London

|Alexander William Williamson

August Wilhelm von Hofmann
Sir Edward Frankland
William Odling
Manchester

|Henry Enfield Roscoe

Oxford

|Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie, 2nd Baronet

Of the above, only 20 of 45 attended.{{Cite journal |last=de Milt |first=Clara |date=1951 |title=The Congress at Karlsruhe |url=https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ed028p421 |journal=Journal of Chemical Education |language=en |volume=28 |issue=8 |pages=421 |doi=10.1021/ed028p421 |bibcode=1951JChEd..28..421D |issn=0021-9584|url-access=subscription }}

Meeting

= First two days =

The congress opened in the assembly hall of the Baden Parliament the 3th September, with Weltzien serving as the general secretary. In his address, he highlighted the international and discipline-specific nature of the meeting. Kekulé delivered an opening address. Wurtz documented the proceedings for future publication. A dinner for 120 people was held in the museum hall.{{Cite journal |last=Mönnich |first=Michael W. |date=2010 |title=Thriving for Unity in Chemistry: The First International Gathering of Chemists |url=https://old.iupac.org/publications/ci/2010/3206/4_monnich.html |journal=Chemistry International |volume=32 |issue=6}}{{Cite journal |last=Mönnich |first=Michael |date=2010 |title="Für unsere schöne Wissenschaft eine Einigung anzubahnen" |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/nadc.201071445 |journal=Nachrichten aus der Chemie |language=en |volume=58 |issue=5 |pages=539–543 |doi=10.1002/nadc.201071445 |issn=1439-9598|url-access=subscription }}

The next day, the assembly, led by Weltzien, discussed the committee's proposed theme of the day before regarding the disputed meanings of "atom," "molecule," and "equivalence." However, no conclusions were reached, leading the committee to meet twice on the same day. They decided to present three specific nomenclature proposals to the assembly for further consideration.

= Last day =

The Karlsruhe meeting started with no firm agreement on the vexing problem of atomic and molecular weights. However, on the meeting's last day reprints of Stanislao Cannizzaro's 1858 paper on atomic weights,See:

  • {{cite journal|last1=Cannizzaro|first1=Stanislao|title=Lettera del Prof. Stanislao Cannizzaro al Prof. S. de Luca; Sunto di un corso di filosofia chimica fatto nella Reale Università di Genova dal Professore S. Cannizzaro|journal=Il Nuovo Cimento|date=1858|volume=7|issue=1 |pages=321–366|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433062756915;view=1up;seq=331|trans-title=Letter from Prof. Stanislao Cannizzaro to Prof. S. de Luca; summary of a course of chemical philosophy taught at the Royal University of Genoa by Prof. S. Cannizzaro|language=it|doi=10.1007/bf02827711|bibcode=1858NCim....7..321.|s2cid=182945196|url-access=subscription}}
  • English translation: {{cite book|last1=Cannizzaro|first1=Stanislao|title=Sketch of a Course of Chemical Philosophy|date=1911|publisher=The Alembic Club|location=Edinburgh, Scotland|url=https://archive.org/stream/sketchofcourseof00cannrich#page/n3/mode/2up}} in which he utilized earlier work by Amedeo Avogadro and André-Marie Ampère, were distributed. Cannizzaro's efforts exerted a heavy and, in some cases, an almost immediate influence on the delegates. Lothar Meyer later wrote that on reading Cannizzaro's paper,{{cite book |last=Moore |first=F. J. |url=https://archive.org/details/apchemistry200820000moor/page/182 |title=A History of Chemistry |publisher=McGraw-Hill |year=1931 |isbn=978-0-07-148855-6 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/apchemistry200820000moor/page/182 182–184] |url-access=registration}} (2nd edition)Cannizzaro, Stanislao (1891) with Arthur Miolati, trans., and Lothar Meyer, ed. Abriss eines Lehrganges der theoretischen Chemie [Outline of a Course of Theoretical Chemistry] (Leipzig, (Germany): Wilhelm Engelmann, 1891), [https://books.google.com/books?id=gCozAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA59 p. 59.] On p. 59, Lothmar Meyer wrote: "Nach Schluss der Versammlung vertheilte Freund Angelo Pavesi im Auftrage des Verfassers eine kleine ziemlich unscheinbare Schrift, den hier wiedergegeben "Sunto" etc. Cannizzaro's, der schon einige Jahre früher erschienen, aber wenig bekannt geworden war. Auch ich erhielt ein Exemplar, das ich einsteckte, um es unterwegs auf der Heimreise zu lesen. Ich las es wiederholt auch zu Hause und war erstaunt über die Klarheit, die das Schriftchen über die wichtigsten Streitpunkte verbreitete. Es fiel mir wie Schuppen von den Augen, die Zweifel schwanden, und das Gefühl ruhigster Sicherheit trat an ihre Stelle." (At the conclusion of the meeting, friend Angelo Pavesi, on behalf of the author, distributed a small, inconspicuous pamphlet, Cannizzaro's "Sunto" etc. [which is] reproduced here [Note: "Sunto" refers to: Stanislao Cannizzaro (1858) [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433062756915;view=1up;seq=331 "Lettera del Prof. Stanislao Cannizzaro al Prof. S. de Luca; Sunto di un corso di filosofia chimica fatto nella Reale Università di Genova dal Professore S. Cannizzaro,"] Il Nuovo Cimento, 7 : 321–366.], which had appeared a few years earlier but has been little known. I too received a copy, which I pocketed to read on the way home. I also read it at home repeatedly and was amazed at the clarity that the pamphlet spread about the main issues. It was as if the scales fell from my eyes, the doubts faded, and the feeling of calmest assurance took its place.)

{{Quote2|I was astonished at its clarity, the little manuscript covered all the important points in dispute. It was as if scales fell from my eyes, doubts vanished, and a feeling of calm certainty came over me.}}

An important long-term result of the Karlsruhe Congress was the adoption of the now-familiar atomic weights. Prior to the Karlsruhe meeting, and going back to John Dalton's work in 1803, several systems of atomic weights were in use.An example of the confusion is provided by the table of atomic weights in the various prevailing systems, which appears in: {{cite book|last1=Gehler|first1=Johann Samuel Traugott|editor1-last=Gmelin|editor2-last=Littrow|editor3-last=Muncke|editor4-last=Pfaff|title=Johann Samuel Traugott Gehler's Physikalisches Wörterbuch, 9. Band, 3. Abtheilung|trans-title=Johann Samuel Traugott Gehler's Physical Dictionary, vol. 9, part 3|date=1840|publisher=E.B. Schwickert|location=Leipzig, (Germany)|pages=1909–1912|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044089527675;view=1up;seq=321|language=de}} In the tables of pages 1911–1912, Column C presents the relative atomic weights of the known elements, assigning to hydrogen (Wasserstoff) an atomic weight of 1. Column D contains the same relative atomic weights as column C, except that oxygen (Sauerstoff) is assigned a relative atomic weight of 100. (Gehler says of columns C and D: "In den Columnen C und D finden sich die Atomgewichte, wie sie sich nach den so eben entwickelten Grundsätzen als die wahrscheinlichsten ergeben möchten, … " (In columns C and D are found the atomic weights, as they would result from the principles [that have been] developed just now as the most probable ones … ) But this system assigns to oxygen an atomic weight of 8 and to carbon (Kohlenstoff) an atomic weight of 6.) Column E presents the relative atomic weights according to Berzelius, who assigned to hydrogen atoms (das Atomgewicht des einfachen Wasserstoffatoms (the atomic weight of single hydrogen atoms)) a value of 0.5 and who found oxygen to have a value of 8.01 — about 16 times greater than that of the hydrogen atom, which is correct. Column F contains the same relative atomic weights as column E, except that oxygen is assigned a relative atomic weight of 100. In one case, a value of 1 was adopted as the weight of hydrogen (the base unit), with 6 for carbon and 8 for oxygen. As long as there were uncertainties over atomic weights then the compositions of many compounds remained in doubt. Following the Karlsruhe meeting, values of about 1 for hydrogen, 12 for carbon, 16 for oxygen, and so forth were adopted. This was based on a recognition that certain elements, such as hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen, were composed of diatomic molecules and not individual atoms.

Attendance

The number of people who wanted to participate was considerable, and on 3 September 1860, 140 chemists met together in the meeting room of the second Chamber of State, which was made available by the Frederick I, Grand Duke of Baden.

According to Wurtz, the printed list of members, supplemented by handwritten additions, contains 126 names listed below.{{Cite web|url=http://web.lemoyne.edu/~GIUNTA/karlsruhe.html|title=Charles-Adolphe Wurtz|website=web.lemoyne.edu|access-date=2019-06-18}}

class="wikitable sortable"

|+

!Country

!City

!Scientists

rowspan="7" |Austria

|Innsbruck

|Heinrich Hlasiwetz

Lemberg

|Leopold von Pebal

Pesth

|Theodor Wertheim

rowspan="4" |Vienna

|Viktor von Lang

Adolf Lieben
Carl Folwarczny{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9dy-eUjKAREC&q=Carl+Folwarezny%3A+Physiologische+und+pathologische+Chemie&pg=PA115 |title=Oesterreichisch-ungarischer Ordens-Almanach |date=1876 |publisher=Sommer |language=de}}
Franz Schneider
rowspan="3" |Belgium

|Brussels

|Jean Stas

rowspan="2" |Ghent

|{{ill|François Donny Jr.|nl|François Donny jr.}}

August Kekulé
rowspan="21" |France

| rowspan="3" |Montpellier

|Antoine Béchamp

Armand Gautier
C. G. Reischauer{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YJgp9CqrpjkC&q=C.+G.+Reischauer&pg=PA181 |title=Archiv Der Pharmazie: Chemistry in Life Sciences |date=1865 |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |language=de}}
Mulhouse

|Th. Schneider{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GThGAQAAMAAJ&q=Th.+Schneider+mulhousen+garancine&pg=PA620 |title=Jahresberichte über die leistungen der chemischen technologie |date=1866 |publisher=O. Wigand |language=de}}

Nancy

|{{ill|Jérôme Nicklès|de}}

rowspan="10" |Paris

|Jean Baptiste Boussingault

Jean-Baptiste Dumas
Charles Friedel
{{ill|Louis Grandeau|fr}}
Louis René Le Canu{{Cite web |title=Le CanuLouis-René Études chimiques sur le Sang Humain. Thèse. |url=https://www.medicusbooks.com/2-Medizin/Anatomie-und-Physiologie/Biochemie-Physiologische-Chemie/Le-Canu-Louis-Rene-Etudes-chimiques-sur-le-Sang-Humain-These::32313.html |access-date=2019-06-24 |website=www.medicusbooks.com}} (1800–1871)
Jean-François Persoz
Jean Baptiste Léopold Alfred Riche{{Cite book |last1=Figurovskii |first1=N. A. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nG_tCAAAQBAJ&q=Jean+Baptiste+Leopold+Alfred+Riche&pg=PA143 |title=Aleksandr Porfir'evich Borodin: A Chemist's Biography |last2=Solov'ev |first2=Yu I. |date=2012-12-06 |publisher=Springer Science & Business Media |isbn=9783642727320}} (1829-1908)
{{ill|Paul Thénard|fr}}
Émile Verdet
Charles-Adolphe Wurtz
rowspan="4" |Strasbourg

|Eugène Théodore Jacquemin{{Cite web |title=Eugène Jacquemin (1828–1909) |url=https://data.bnf.fr/fr/10708625/eugene_jacquemin/ |access-date=2019-06-24 |website=data.bnf.fr}} (1828–1909)

Charles Oppermann{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gySfgVZ8LtgC&q=Charles+Oppermann+chemistry&pg=PA84 |title=Nationalizing Science: Adolphe Wurtz and the Battle for French Chemistry |date=8 November 2000 |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=9780262264297}} (1805-1872)
Frédéric Charles Schlagdenhauffen{{Cite web |title=Frédéric Charles Schlagdenhauffen |url=https://www.geni.com/people/Fr%C3%A9d%C3%A9ric-Schlagdenhauffen/6000000020850410841 |access-date=2019-06-27 |website=geni_family_tree|date=5 December 2016 }} (1830–1907)
Paul Schützenberger
rowspan="2" |Tann

|{{ill|Charles Kestner|fr}}

Auguste Scheurer-Kestner
rowspan="56" |Germany

| rowspan="2" |Berlin

|Adolf von Baeyer

Georg Hermann Quincke
Bonn

| Hans Heinrich Landolt

Breslau

| Lothar Meyer

Kassel

| Carl Gustav Guckelberger

Klausthal

| {{ill|Johann August Streng|de}}

Darmstadt

|[https://de.wikisource.org/wiki/Emil_Leonhard_Wilhelm_Winckler Emil Wilhelm Winckler]

Erlangen

|Eugen Freiherr von Gorup-Besanez

rowspan="2" |Freiburg i. B.

| Lambert Heinrich von Babo

Woldemar Alexander Adolph von Schneider{{Cite web |title=Woldemar Alexander Adolph von Schneider |url=https://www.geni.com/people/Woldemar-Alexander-Adolph-von-Schneider/6000000013737978128 |access-date=2019-07-11 |website=geni_family_tree |language=en-US}} (1843–1914)
rowspan="3" |Giessen

|Emil Boeckmann{{Cite journal |last=Boeckmann |first=Emil |date=1837-01-01 |title=Ueber einige Doppelverbindungen von Cyanquecksilber mit Schwefelcyan-Metallen |journal=Annalen der Pharmacie |volume=22 |issue=2 |pages=153–158 |doi=10.1002/jlac.18370220205}}

Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp
{{ill|Heinrich Will|de|Heinrich Will (Chemiker)}}
Göttingen

|Friedrich Konrad Beilstein

Halle a. S.

|Wilhelm Heinrich Heintz

Hanover

| Friedrich Heeren

rowspan="7" |Heidelberg

|Becker

O. Braun
Robert Bunsen
Georg Ludwig Carius
Richard August Carl Emil Erlenmeyer
Otto Mendiushttp://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/otto-mendius/
Jacob Heinrich Wilhelm Schiel{{Cite book |last=Partington |first=J. R. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-1JdDwAAQBAJ&q=Jacob+Heinrich+Wilhelm+Schiel+chemistry&pg=PA413 |title=History of Chemistry |date=1964-06-18 |publisher=Macmillan International Higher Education |isbn=9781349005543}} (1813-1889)
rowspan="2" |Jena

| Karl Gotthelf Lehmann

H. Ludwig{{Cite web |title=[Earliest: (01/01/1846 TO 12/31/1930)] AND [Author: Ludwig H] : Search |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/action/doSearch?ContribAuthorStored=Ludwig%2C+H&content=articlesChapters&countTerms=true&target=default&AfterYear=1846&BeforeYear=1930& |access-date=2019-07-11 |website=onlinelibrary.wiley.com |language=en}}
rowspan="6" |Karlsruhe

| A. Klemm

R. Muller
Julius Neßler
{{ill|Theodor Petersen|de}}
Karl Friedrich Heinrich Seubert{{Cite web |title=handbuch der allgemeinen waarenkunde von seubert karl – ZVAB |url=https://www.zvab.com/buch-suchen/titel/handbuch-der-allgemeinen-waarenkunde/autor/seubert-karl/ |access-date=2019-07-13 |website=www.zvab.com}} (1815–1868)
Karl Weltzien
rowspan="4" |Leipzig

| Otto Linné Erdmann

{{ill|Christoph Heinrich Hirzel|de}}
Wilhelm Knop
Kuhn
rowspan="2" |Mannheim

|Carl Gundelach{{Cite book |last=Ärzte |first=Versammlung Deutscher Naturforscher und |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7j0_AAAAcAAJ&q=Dr.+Carl+Gundelach%2C+Fabrikdirectors+in+Mannheim&pg=PA85 |title=Tageblatt der Versammlung Deutscher Naturforscher und Ärzte |date=1861 |language=de}}{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4RhKAQAAMAAJ&q=Dr.+Carl+Gundelach%2C+Fabrikdirectors+in+Mannheim&pg=PA157 |title=Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft |date=1878 |publisher=Verlag Chemie. |language=de}}

Heinrich G. F. Schröder
rowspan="2" |Marburg a. L.

| Rudolf Schmitt

{{ill|Constantin Zwenger|de}}
Munich

|Friedrich Geiger{{Cite book |last=Brock |first=William H. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VugoemP2th0C&q=justus+von+liebig+munich+Geiger&pg=PA139 |title=Justus Von Liebig: The Chemical Gatekeeper |date=2002-06-20 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9780521524735 |language=en}} (1833-1889)

Nuremberg

| Ernst von Bibra

Offenbach

| Grimm{{Cite book |last=Ärzte |first=Versammlung Deutscher Naturforscher und |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7j0_AAAAcAAJ&q=Grimm%2C+Dr.%2C+Chemiker+in+Offenbach&pg=PA85 |title=Tageblatt der Versammlung Deutscher Naturforscher und Ärzte |date=1861 |language=de}}

Rappenau

| Finck

Schönberg

|Gustav Reinhold Hoffmann{{Cite book |last=Fruton |first=Joseph Stewart |url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_tRlC9NyNNN8C |title=Contrasts in Scientific Style: Research Groups in the Chemical and Biochemical Sciences |date=1990 |publisher=American Philosophical Society |isbn=9780871691910 |page=[https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_tRlC9NyNNN8C/page/n279 282] |language=en |quote=Gustav Reinhold Hoffmann (1831–1919).}} (1831-1919)

rowspan="2" |Speyer

|Franz Keller{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=juq3mNJubykC&q=Franz+Keller+chemiker+speyer&pg=PA209 |title=Annalen der Chemie und Pharmacie |date=1859 |publisher=C.F. Winter'sche |language=de}}

Albert Mühlhaüser{{Cite book |last=Ärzte |first=Gesellschaft Deutscher Naturforscher und |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xrPxxZmHPzAC&q=m%C3%BChlhausen+speyer&pg=PA89 |title=Tageblatt der Versammlung deutscher Naturforscher und Aerzte |date=1861 |language=de}}
rowspan="2" |Stuttgart

|Hermann von Fehling

W. Hallwachs
rowspan="3" |Tübingen

|Karl Finckh{{Cite book |last1=Hermann |first1=Armin |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=leQcAOFbyK8C&q=chemiker+T%C3%BCbingen+Carl+Finckh&pg=PA160 |title=Physik physiologische Chemie und Pharmazie an der Universität Tübingen |last2=Wankmüller |first2=Armin |date=1980 |publisher=Franz Steiner Verlag |isbn=9783164428019 |language=de}}{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FrB35xQvBiUC&q=chemiker+T%C3%BCbingen+Carl+Finckh&pg=PA256 |title=Archiv for Pharmacie Og Technisk Chemie Med Deres Grundvidenskaber |date=1864 |language=da}} von Winterbach

Alexander Naumann
Adolph Strecker
rowspan="3" |Wiesbaden

| {{ill|Wilhelm Theodor Oscar Casselmann|de}}

Carl Remigius Fresenius
{{ill|Carl Neubauer|de}}
rowspan="2" |Würzburg

| Johann Joseph Scherer

Valentin Schwarzenbach{{Cite book |last=Buchner |first=Max |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=83WuBgAAQBAJ&q=von+Schwarzenbach+privatdozent+in+w%C3%BCrzburg&pg=PA674 |title=Aus der Vergangenheit der Universität Würzburg: Festschrift Zum 350 Jährigen Bestehen der Universität |date=2014-01-13 |publisher=Springer-Verlag |isbn=9783642995781 |language=de}} (1830-1890)
rowspan="2" |Italy

|Genoa

|Stanislao Cannizzaro

Pavia

|Angelo Pavesi{{Cite book |last1=McDonald |first1=Donald |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xriMAgAAQBAJ&q=Angelo+Pavesi+Chemistry+Pavia&pg=PA338 |title=A History of Platinum and its Allied Metals |last2=Hunt |first2=Leslie B. |date=1982-01-01 |publisher=Johnson Matthey Plc |isbn=9780905118833}}

Mexico

|

|{{ill|Louis Posselt|es}} (1817-1880 brother of {{ill|Christian Posselt|de|Christian Wilhelm Posselt|lt=Christian Posselt}})

Portugal

|Coimbra

|{{ill|Matias de Carvalho e Vasconcelos|pt}}{{Cite book |last=Formosinho |first=Sebastião J. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ONb3bmzAzXkC&q=Mide+Carvalho+coimbra&pg=PT111 |title=Nos Bastidores da Ciência: 20 anos depois |date=2007-08-01 |publisher=Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra / Coimbra University Press |isbn=9789898074096 |language=pt}} (1832-1910)

rowspan="7" |Russia

|Kharkov

|{{ill|Alexei Nikolajewitsch Sawitsch|de}}

rowspan="4" |St. Petersburg

|Alexander Borodin

Dmitri Mendeleev
{{ill|Leon Nikolajewitsch Schischkow|de}}
Nikolay Zinin
rowspan="2" |Warsaw

|{{ill|Teofil Lesiński|pl}}

Jakub Natanson
rowspan="4" |Sweden

|Harpenden

|Joseph Henry Gilbert

rowspan="2" |Lund

|Nils Johan Berlin

Christian Wilhelm Blomstrand
Stockholm

|{{ill|Johann Friedrich Bahr|de}}

rowspan="6" |Switzerland

| rowspan="2" |Bern

|{{ill|Carl Emanuel Brunner|de}}

Hugo Schiff
Geneva

|Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac

Lausanne

|Henri Bischoff{{Cite web |title=Bischoff Henri |url=https://hls-dhs-dss.ch/articles/031285/2002-11-21/ |access-date=2019-06-27 |website=hls-dhs-dss.ch |language=fr}} (1813–1889)

Reichenau bei Chur

|{{ill|Adolph von Planta|es}}

Zurich

|Johannes Wislicenus

Spain

|Madrid

|{{ill|Ramón Torres Muñoz de Luna|es}}

rowspan="17" |United Kingdom

|Dublin

|James Apjohn

rowspan="3" |Edingburgh

|Alexander Crum Brown

James Alfred Wanklyn
Frederick Guthrie
Glasgow

|Thomas Anderson

rowspan="7" |London

|Baldwin Francis Duppa{{Cite web |last=Archives |first=The National |title=The Discovery Service |url=https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/c/F32630 |access-date=2019-06-24 |website=discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk}} (1828–1873)

Carey Foster
John Hall Gladstone
Hugo Müller
Henry Minchin Noad
Alphone René Le Mire de Normandy
William Odling
Manchester

|Henry Enfield Roscoe

rowspan="3" |Oxford

|Charles Giles Bridle Daubeny

George Griffith{{Cite book |last1=Gadd |first1=Ian Anders |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_bYJAgAAQBAJ&q=George+Griffith&pg=PA540 |title=History of Oxford University Press: Volume II: 1780 to 1896 |last2=Eliot |first2=Simon |last3=Louis |first3=William Roger |last4=Robbins |first4=Keith |date=November 2013 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=9780199543151}}
Friedrich Schickendantz
Woolwich

|Frederick Augustus Abel

References

Further reading

  • {{cite journal | author = de Milt, Clara | title = The Congress at Karlsruhe | journal = Journal of Chemical Education | year = 1951 | volume = 28 | issue = 8 | pages = 421–425 | url = http://search.jce.divched.org/JCEIndex/FMPro?-db=jceindex.fp5&-lay=wwwform&combo=karlsruhe&-find=&-format=detail.html&-skip=1&-max=1&-token.2=1&-token.3=10 | doi = 10.1021/ed028p421 |bibcode = 1951JChEd..28..421D | url-access = subscription }} (subscription required)
  • {{cite journal | author = Hartley, Harold | title = Stanislao Cannizzaro, F.R.S. (1826–1910) and the First International Chemical Conference at Karlsruhe | journal = Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London | year = 1966 | volume = 21 | issue = 1 | pages = 56–63 | doi = 10.1098/rsnr.1966.0006 | s2cid = 58453894 }}
  • {{cite book | last = Hudson | first = John | title = The History of Chemistry | publisher = Chapman and Hall | year = 1992 | pages = 122–125 | isbn = 978-0-12-007208-8 }}

: (Note the incorrect spelling of Weltzien's name.)

  • {{cite book | last = Ihde | first = Aaron J. | title = The Development of Modern Chemistry | publisher = Dover | year = 1984 | pages = 228–230 | isbn = 978-0-486-64235-2 }}

: (Originally published in 1964.)

  • {{cite magazine| last=Laing |first=Michael |title=The Karlsruhe Congress, 1860 |journal=Education in Chemistry |publisher=Royal Society of Chemistry |date=November 1995| pages = 151–153 |volume=32 |issue=6 |url-access=subscription |url=http://pubs.rsc.org/historical-collection/products/EIC#!issueid=EIC-1995-32-6 }}
  • {{cite book | last = Partington | first = J. R. | title = A Short History of Chemistry | publisher = MacMillan and Company | year = 1951 | pages = [https://archive.org/details/shorthistoryofch0000part_q6h4/page/256 256–258] | isbn = 978-0-486-65977-0 | url = https://archive.org/details/shorthistoryofch0000part_q6h4/page/256 }}

: (Note the incorrect month given for the conference.)

  • {{cite book |title=The Question of the Atom: From the Karlsruhe Congress to the First Solvay Conference, 1860–1911 |last=Nye |first=Mary Jo |publisher=Springer |year=1984 |isbn=978-0-938228-07-3 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/questionofatomfr0000unse }}