Margarete Traube
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Margarete Traube (also known as Margherita Traube Mengarini) (4 June 1856 – 11 December 1912) was a German-born chemist, salon holder, and early feminist who lived in Italy much of her adult life.


Biography

Traube was born in Berlin, Germany into a
Jewish Jews ( he, יְהוּדִים, , ) or Jewish people are an ethnoreligious group and nation originating from the Israelites Israelite origins and kingdom: "The first act in the long drama of Jewish history is the age of the Israelites""The ...
family with a scientific tradition. Her father was Ludwig Traube (1818–1876), a famous doctor; her uncle was the chemical physiologist Moritz Traube (1826–1894); while her brother was a well known Middle-Latin
philologist Philology () is the study of language in oral and written historical sources; it is the intersection of textual criticism, literary criticism, history, and linguistics (with especially strong ties to etymology). Philology is also defined as th ...
Ludwig Traube (1861–1907). She is the maternal aunt of Anna Fraentzel Celli, nurse and malarial researcher (1877-1958), wife of Prof Angelo Celli (3/14/1858-11/8/1915). In 1876 both of her parents died. The following year, at age 21, she arrived in Rome, Italy, on a pleasure trip accompanied by the German writer and emancipationist
Fanny Lewald Fanny Lewald (21 March 1811 – 5 August 1889) was a German novelist and essayist and a women's rights activist. Life and career Fanny Lewald was born at Königsberg in East Prussia in 1811 to a bourgeois, Jewish family. She was taken out of sc ...
.Dröscher, Ariane. ''History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences'', vol. 35, no. 3, 2013, pp. 473–474. ''JSTOR'', www.jstor.org/stable/43862199. Accessed 4 Oct. 2020. In 1878 Traube decided to settle permanently in Italy, and enrolled at the University of Rome (later graduating with honors in natural sciences) where she became the favorite pupil of Dutch physiologist
Jacob Moleschott Jacob Moleschott (9 August 1822 – 20 May 1893) was a Dutch physiologist and writer on dietetics. He is known for his philosophical views in regard to scientific materialism. He was a member of German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina (since 1884). ...
, who had himself been a former student of her father's in Berlin.


Marriages

At the university, Traube reconnected with Franz Christian Boll, a physiologist who had also been one of her father's students. Boll had moved to Italy six years earlier to cure himself of pulmonary tuberculosis, and in 1873 he was named chair of anatomy and comparative physiology at the University of Rome. On 12 March 1879, Traub and Boll married, but he died only 10 months later, on 19 December. Widowed, Traub dedicated herself to the care and posthumous publication of her husband's works in Italian and German. Later, she met the Italian engineer, and eventual professor, Guglielmo Mengarini and they were wed 18 August 1884 in Zurich, Switzerland. They went on to have four children: Publio (1885–1949), an economist; Cora who died in 1886 as an infant; Valeria (1889–1938); and Fausta (1893–1952), a sculptor. Traube and Mengarini traveled often between their home in central Rome, the Palazzo Mengarini and their villa in Porto d'Anzio. Continuing the tradition of salons held by her parents in Germany (where she had first met her first husband Franz Boll), Traube hosted exclusive Roman cultural salons that explored feminism and humanism, and influenced Italian culture of the time. Attendees included well known personalities of the time such as
Theodor Mommsen Christian Matthias Theodor Mommsen (; 30 November 1817 – 1 November 1903) was a German classical scholar, historian, jurist, journalist, politician and archaeologist. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest classicists of the 19th centu ...
, Emanuel Löwy, Pietro Blaserna,
Adolf Furtwängler Johann Michael Adolf Furtwängler (30 June 1853 – 10 October 1907) was a German archaeologist, teacher, art historian and museum director. He was the father of the conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler and grandfather of the German archaeologist Andr ...
, as well as her brother Ludwig Traube.


Research

As a university student of Jacob Moleschott, Traube carried out her first research work in the laboratory of the physiologist
Emil Du Bois-Reymond Emil Heinrich du Bois-Reymond (7 November 181826 December 1896) was a German physician and physiologist, the co-discoverer of nerve action potential, and the developer of experimental electrophysiology. Life Du Bois-Reymond was born in Berlin a ...
(where she was forced to sit behind a curtain). Later she worked in the chemical laboratory of Stefano Capranica, who had studied with her first husband, Boll. She continued her studies of animal physiology collaborating with the physicist Pietro Blaserna and then working in the laboratory of Casimiro Manassei, where she conducted research on skin permeability. She was also known to collaborate with Luigi Luciani and with Angelo Celli and his Institute of Hygiene. With her colleague Alberto Scala, she was lead author on several published papers describing their research on the chemistry of colloids and metal alloys.Traube-Mengarini, Margarethe, and A. Scala. "Über die chemische Durchlässigkeit lebender Algen und Protozoenzellen für anorganische Salze und die spezifische Wirkung letzterer." ''Biochem. Zschr. XVII'' (1909): 443-489. At the end of her life, from 1911 on, she was working in Emanuele Paternò's chemistry laboratory. In addition to her scientific production, Traube was also a multifaceted author, contributing numerous essays on many topics of philosophy, society and geography, but no printed copies are known to exist today.


Final years

In 1912, sick with cancer, Traube traveled to
Milan Milan ( , , Lombard: ; it, Milano ) is a city in northern Italy, capital of Lombardy, and the second-most populous city proper in Italy after Rome. The city proper has a population of about 1.4 million, while its metropolitan city h ...
for a few months of experimental treatment by the Italian pathologist and hygienist Francesco Sanfelice. Even though she was ill, while in Milan, Traube continued her research using the laboratory of Ettore Molinari. Returning to her home in Anzio, apparently cured, she contracted a severe case of the flu and suddenly died there on 11 December 1912 at age 56.


Selected publications

* ''Experimentelle Beiträge zur Physiologie des Fischgehirns'', in "Archiv für Anatomie und Physiologie," 1884. * ''Research on the gases contained in the swim bladder of fish'', in " Accademia dei Lincei," 1888. * ''The education of our children'', in "New Anthology," 1898. * ''On the conjugation of amoebas'', in "Rendiconti della R. Accademia dei Lincei," 1903. * ''Ludwig Traube,'' in "Nomina Sacra." (1907). Print. * (with Alberto Scala), ''Ueber die chemische Durchlässigkeit lebender Algen- und Protozoenzellen für anorganische Salze und die spezifische Wirkung letzterer'', in " Biochemische Zeitschrift," 1909. * (with Alberto Scala), ''Solution of metals in the colloidal state obtained by the action of boiling distilled water'', in "Proceedings of the Italian Society for the Progress of Sciences," 1910.


Other projects

*
Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia Commons (or simply Commons) is a media repository of free-to-use images, sounds, videos and other media. It is a project of the Wikimedia Foundation. Files from Wikimedia Commons can be used across all of the Wikimedia projects in ...
contains images or other files about Margarete Traube
Wikiquote
contains quotes (in Italian) about Margarete Traube


References


External links

* Alexander Nebrig, Die Physiologin Margarete Traube-Mengarini (1856-1912) Hannover. Wehrhahn Verlag. 2012, 109 pp. * Mary RS Creese, Thomas M. Creese: ''Ladies in the laboratory II: West European women in science, 1800-1900: a survey of their contributions to research''. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, 2004, p. 123. {{DEFAULTSORT:Traube, Margarete 1856 births 1912 deaths Deaths from cancer in Lazio 20th-century chemists 19th-century chemists Scientists from Rome Women chemists German women chemists Italian women chemists German salon-holders