Elementa chemiae

E391757

Elementa chemiae is an influential early 18th-century chemistry textbook by Herman Boerhaave that systematically organized and advanced contemporary chemical knowledge.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Elementa chemiae canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf chemistry textbook
scientific treatise
associatedWith iatrochemistry tradition
pre-Lavoisier chemistry
author Herman Boerhaave
circulation widely read across Europe
countryOfOrigin Dutch Republic
describedBySource early 18th-century chemistry textbook
describesConcept chemical compounds
chemical elements as then understood
combustion (pre-Lavoisier theory)
crystallization
distillation
solutions
sublimation
field chemistry
natural philosophy
focusesOn chemical analysis
chemical reactions
laboratory operations
practical chemistry
properties of substances
theoretical chemistry
genre textbook
hasEdition later translations into European vernacular languages
hasPart two volumes
historicalPeriod early 18th century
impact contributed to the professionalization of chemistry
helped separate chemistry from alchemy
standard reference for European chemists in the 18th century
influenced 18th-century chemistry
chemical pedagogy
systematic chemical nomenclature development
influencedBy Georg Ernst Stahl
Johann Joachim Becher
Robert Boyle
language Latin
libraryOfCongressClassification QD
methodology systematic organization of chemical knowledge
notableFor bridging alchemical and modern chemical thought
clear, systematic presentation of chemistry
placeOfPublication Leiden
publicationDate 1732
publisher Johannes Arnoldus Langerak
Johannes Hasebroek
structure systematic exposition of chemical principles
title Elementa chemiae
usedAt University of Leiden
usedFor teaching chemistry

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Herman Boerhaave notableWork Elementa chemiae
Boerhaave hasWork Elementa chemiae
subject surface form: Herman Boerhaave