Alfred Nobel, the great Swedish inventor and
industrialist, was a man on many contrasts. He made a fortune but lived
a simple life, he was cheerful in company but said in private. A lover
of mankind, he never had a family or wife to love him. He was a
patriotic son of his native land and he died on foreign soil. He
invented dynamite, to improve the peacetime industries of road mining
and road building, but he saw it used as a weapon of war to kill and
injured his fellow man. During his life he often felt he was useless.
He was world famous for his works he was never personally well known,
for throughout his life he avoid publicity. But since his death his
name brought fame and glory to others.
He
was born in Stockholm on October 21, 1833 but moved to Russia with his
parents in 1842, where his father made a strong position for himself in
the engineering industry. Most of the family returned to Sweden in
1859, where Alfred rejoined them in 1863, beginning his own study of
explosions in his father’s laboratory. He had never been to school or
university but had studied privately and by the time he was twenty he
was a skillful chemist and excellent linguistics, speaking Swedish,
Russian, German, French and English. He builds up over 80 companies in
20 different countries.
But Nobel’s main concern was never with making
money on scientific discoveries. In youth he had taken a serious
interest in literature and psychology. He was always generous to the
poor. His greatest wish was to see an end of wars and thus peace
between nations. His famous will, in witch he left money to provide
prizes for outstanding work in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology,
Medicine, Literature and Peace. |