Welcome to The book of science. Come here each week to find
poetry and commentary on another milestone of the history of science.
This week (starting 30 May 2026)
In 1828, Friedrich Wöhler synthesized urea in the lab. This marks the beginning of modern organic chemistry.
Recently
1827
|
|
Georg Ohm
electromagnetism |
1826
|
|
Karl Ernst von Baer
embryology |
1825
|
|
Michael Faraday
chemistry |
1825, 1826
|
|
Heidelberg—Carl Jacob Löwig,
Leopold Gmelin,
Antoine Jérôme Balard
elements |
1825, 1827
|
|
Copenhagen, Berlin—Hans Christian Ørsted,
Friedrich Wöhler
elements |
1823
|
|
Michael Faraday
physics |
1823
|
|
Stockholm—Jöns Jacob Berzelius
elements |
1822
|
|
Charles Babbage
computer science |
1822
|
|
Jean François Champollion
linguistics |
1821, 1834
|
|
Thomas Johann Seebeck,
Hans Christian Ørsted
electromagnetism |
1821
|
|
Humphry Davy,
Henry Cavendish
electromagnetism |
1820
|
|
Hans Christian Øersted,
André-Marie Ampère,
Michael Faraday
electromagnetism |
Parts of this book
You may jump to some parts of The book of science directly by selecting menu items:
- About, more about this book
- Contents, a table of milestones in the history of science, arranged chronologically
- Elements, tables for the chemical elements
- Scientists, index of scientists, by last name
- Sciences, index of sciences
- Eponymous, index of milestones named after scientists
- Keywords, index of keywords in poems and titles
- Search, where you can search the book by word or phrase
Related works
You may read subsets of The book of science as separate volumes.
These generally contain only the last poem on each milestone from the full book:
This web site also includes other works by Tom Sharp
and work by other poets.
See also in The book of science: