by Nadia Chung
Fame and fortune came to Alfred Nobel, a 19th-century Swedish
chemist, when he invented
dynamite, a highly
explosive mixture that was safer to handle and use than
gunpowder. Nobel
acknowledged the
destructive potential of dynamite, yet he believed it would
pave the way for world peace. However, the
invention he had hoped would end all wars came to be used as a
lethal weapon by people with different
intentions from his own.
In 1888, French newspapers
mistook the death of Nobel's brother
for Alfred's. One
obituary printed, "The
merchant of death is dead." As a
pacifist, Alfred Nobel
sorely regretted the use and
impact of his inventions in war. About a year before his lonely death in Italy on December 10, 1896, Nobel had
drawn up a
will establishing the now famous Nobel Prize. The will
stipulated that the largest part of his
estate be used to
set up a
foundation that would
award prizes annually
to those who "have
conferred the greatest benefit on mankind" in the fields of physics, chemistry, medicine, literature, and peace. This shocked relatives who were expecting a share of his
legacy, and many wanted to
contest the document. But on December 10, 1901, the fifth
anniversary of Alfred Nobel's death, the first set of Nobel Prizes was finally awarded.
Journalists now introduce the Nobel
laureates and their
contributions to the world every October, with the awards ceremony being held on December 10.
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