Roberto Duarte Silva

Duarte Silva's portrait on the Cape Verdean escudo
Plaque in his former house in Ribeira Grande

Roberto Duarte da Silva (25 February 1837, Ribeira Grande, Cape Verde - 8 February 1889, Paris) was a Cape Verdean chemist.

Career

Duarte Silva began at the age of 14 as an apprentice in a pharmacy. Later he came to Lisbon to work in the Farmácia Azevedo, and studied at the Escola de Farmácia of the University of Lisbon. For some years he lived in Macau and Hong Kong, where he founded his own pharmacy.[1] He studied the compounds of amyl bases and propylamine at the laboratory of Charles Adolphe Wurtz.

In 1863 he went to Paris, and taught analytical chemistry at the École des Mines de Paris (now the Mines ParisTech), the Ecole Centrale des Arts et Manufactures (now the École Centrale Paris), and the École supérieure de physique et de Chimie industrial de la ville de Paris from 1882 until his death. Through these years he taught and was active in research, especially in the field of organic chemistry.[1]

Duarte Silva was presented with the Prix Jecker by the French Academy of Sciences in 1885. In 1887 he became president of the Société Chimique de France. Among his students was chemist Charles Lepierre, who settled in 1888 at his suggestion in Portugal.[2] A street is named in his honor in São Domingos de Benfica, in Lisbon.

Legacy

Since 2007, he is featured on a Cape Verdean $500 escudos banknote.

References

Furether reading

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