- Sima Lozanić
Infobox Person
name=Sima Lozanić
caption= Portrait of "Sima Lozanić", 1905
dead=dead
birth_date=birth date|1847|2|24|mf=y
birth_place=Belgrade ,Ottoman Empire
death_date=circaJune 7 ,1935
death_place=Belgrade ,Kingdom of Yugoslavia Sima Lozanić (Serbian
Cyrillic : Сима Лозанић) (1847-1935) was aSerb ian chemist, president of theSerbian Royal Academy and the first rector ofUniversity of Belgrade .Biography
Lozanić was born
February 24 ,1847 inBelgrade , Serbia. He completed legal studies in Belgrade, studied chemistry under ProfessorJohannes Wislicenius inZurich and later with ProfessorAugust Wilhelm von Hofmann inBerlin . He earned hisdoctorate degree onMarch 19 ,1870 at theUniversity of Zurich . He was a professor at the "Great School " from 1872 and at the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Belgrade until 1924.When the University of Belgrade was founded in 1905, he was among the first eight full-time professors who selected the entire remaining academic staff. Sima Lozanić was then chosen as the first rector of the university. His 1905 opening ceremony words remained recorded as the following:
:"Our previous belief that Serbian people will unite not by spelling books but by weapons was disastrous for our people's intellect. I believe the contrary - that education will be the main factor in solving that important question of ours and that it would have already been solved if we had better cared for our education. Therefore, I believe that education is the force that achieves all the goals. Had our education been more advanced, everything in the life of our people would have been better and more successful."
His chemistry classes paralleled, perhaps exceeded in some cases, those of the top
Europe an universities. They were organized with well-equipped laboratories and libraries, and produced some of the first chemistry textbooks. Lozanić himself wrote a number of textbooks, which covered various subject areas of chemistry:Inorganic chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,Analytical chemistry and Chemical technology. His textbooks were internationally renowned and in some areas groundbreaking. For example, Lozanić's Inorganic Chemistry textbook was the first European university textbook with Dmitriy Mendeleyev'speriodic table of elements and one of the first containing a chapter onThermochemistry . His Organic Chemistry textbooks are among the first books in which the compounds were represented bystructural formula s.He also did scientific and professional work related to all areas of
Chemistry ; some of his most valued works were aboutelectrosynthesis in which he researched the reactions of CO and CO2 with other substances under the effect ofelectric discharge . He published over 200 scientific papers in applied and experimental chemistry.He performed the first analysis of "thermal water" of
Gamzigrad spa in 1889. He became a member ofSerbian Academic Society onJanuary 30 ,1873 , associate member ofSerbian Royal Academy onJanuary 23 1888 and became a full member onJanuary 6 ,1890 . He was a president of Serbian Royal Academy twice - 1899 to 1900 and 1903 to 1906. From 1907 to 1912 he was a preseident ofSerbian Chemistry Society .He was the minister of industry from
January 12 1894 toMarch 21 1894 , andOctober 15 1894 toJune 25 1895 andOctober 11 1897 toJune 30 1899 ,minister of foreign affairs fromMarch 21 1894 toOctober 15 1894 and fromDecember 23 ,1902 toMarch 23 ,1903 , as well as a diplomat and participant in all wars of the time. Lozanić was the ambassador of the Serbian government inLondon from 1900. He was a president of Serbian refugee aid committee in 1916 and a head of US mission for aid and support of Serbia from 1917.He was voted the first honored doctor of sciences of the University of Belgrade. He died
June 7 1935 in Belgrade, in the age of 89. His sonMilivoje S. Lozanić was also a chemist and inherited his university position as the professor of Chemistry courses.An exhibition "Sima Lozanić in Serbian science and culture" was held in his honor, organized by
Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts from January to March 1993, in Academy's gallery inKnez Mihailova street inBelgrade . His life and work was especially investigated by chemistSnežana Bojović , who wrote a 262-page book "Sima Lozanić".ee also
*
Lozanić's triangle .Resources
References
*cite book | author=Bojovic, Snezana| title=Sima Lozanic in Serbian science and culture | publisher=MHT | year=1993 | id= ISBN B0000D6RBS [http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0000D6RBS]
*cite book | author=Bojovic, Snezana | title=Sima Lozanic, 1847-1935 | publisher=Princip | year=1996 | id= ISBN 86-82273-04-7
*cite web|url=http://www.mfa.gov.yu/History/ministri/SLozanic_e.html|title=The List of the Ministers for Foreign Affairs since the Forming of the First Government in 1811 to This Day|work=|accessyear=2006|accessdate=January 20
*cite web|url=http://helix.chem.bg.ac.yu/hf/istorija/|title=The Chemistry Faculty|work=|accessyear=2006|accessdate=January 20External links
* [http://www.sanu.ac.yu Serbian Academy of Arts and Sciences]
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