Tadeus Reichstein

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Tadeus Reichstein
Tadeus Reichstein
Tadeus Reichstein
Born July 20, 1897
Włocławek, Congress Poland
Died August 1, 1996 (aged 99)
Basel, Switzerland
Citizenship Switzerland
Nationality Poland
Known for cortisone
Notable awards Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1950

Tadeusz Reichstein (July 20, 1897August 1, 1996) was a Polish-born Swiss Nobel Prize-winning chemist.

He was born into a Jewish family at Włocławek, Congress Poland. After passing his early childhood at Kiev, where his father was an engineer, Reichstein was educated, first at a boarding-school at Jena, Germany.

In 1933, working in Zürich, Switzerland, Reichstein succeeded, independently of Sir Norman Haworth and his collaborators in Britain, in synthesizing vitamin C (ascorbic acid).

Together with E. C. Kendall and P. S. Hench, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1950 for their work on hormones of the adrenal cortex which culminated in the isolation of cortisone.

He died in Basel, Switzerland. The principal industrial process for the artificial synthesis of Vitamin C still bears his name. Reichstein was the longest-lived Nobel laureate at the time of his death, but was surpassed in 2008 by Rita Levi-Montalcini.

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