Igor Igorevich Wagner

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Yegor Yegorevich Wagner (Russian Егор Егорович Вагнер, sometimes Georg Wagner or Egor Vagner; 9 December 1849, in Kazan – 27 November 1903, in Warsaw) was a Russian chemist.

Igor Igorevich Wagner

Wagner's father was a German-born lawyer and civil servant, while his mother came from the Russian aristocracy. He began studying law in 1867 at the University of Kazan, but later switched to chemistry under the influence of Alexander Mikhaylovich Zaytsev. Zaytsev had made Kazan into a center of organic chemistry in Russia, and many of his students became professors. Wagner received his chemistry degree in 1874 and received a two-year scholarship to prepare for becoming a professor. He stayed with Saizev for a year in Kazan and spent a year with Butlerov at the University of Saint Petersburg. After that he was assistant professor in Saint Petersburg until 1882 and then professor at the Forestry and Agricultural Institute in Puławy near Lublin, where he set up a laboratory for organic chemistry.

He became the first professor of organic chemistry in 1886 at the University of Warsaw, but moved in 1889 to the newly founded Polytechnic in Warsaw, where he was Professor of Organic Chemistry and Dean of the Faculty of Chemistry.

The Wagner–Meerwein rearrangement reaction is named after Wagner and Hans Meerwein. Wagner proposed that bornyl chloride undergoes an internal rearrangement to form pinene. This type of rearrangement was then generalized by Meerwein.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Birladeanu, Ludmila (2000). "The Story of the Wagner-Meerwein Rearrangement". Journal of Chemical Education. 77 (7): 858. doi:10.1021/ed077p858. ISSN 0021-9584.
  • https://web.archive.org/web/20160304234114/http://www.chem.qmul.ac.uk/rschg/biog.html
  • Lewis, David E. (2013). Yegor Yegorovich Vagner (1849−1903): A "Wondrously Sharpwitted" Chemist. ACS Symposium Series. 1136. pp. 143–165. doi:10.1021/bk-2013-1136.ch009. ISBN 978-0-8412-2800-9. ISSN 0097-6156.
  • Sementsov, A. (1966). "Egor Egorovich Vagner and His Role in Terpene Chemistry". Chymia. 11: 151–155. doi:10.2307/27757265. ISSN 0095-9367. JSTOR 27757265.
  • "Georg Wagner". Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft. 36 (4): 4591–4613. 1903. doi:10.1002/cber.190303604139. ISSN 0365-9496.
  • Starosel'skii, P. I.; Nikulina, E. P. Yegor Yegorovich Vagner, 1849−1903. Izd-vo. “Nauka”: Moscow, 1977;
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