Source:@Sheshapatangi/Twitter
This thread is into two parts, Part 1 & 2 which covers largely about #PCRay’s works and Life History in brief
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
PART 1#PrafullaChandraRay: The Acharya Who Revealed History Of Hindu Chemistry To World.
In any other country, this legend would’ve gained a cult like status, alas pic.twitter.com/ZWXQ7v6AU0
this is Bharat still reeling under inferior syllabus dictated by Communists & Congress’s
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
No Chemistry Student reads about P.C Ray who is called as Father of Pharmaceuticals & Chemical Science in India
No Chemistry Student knows about the Two Volume Masterpiece on Ancient Hindu
Chemistry.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
Ray’s seminal work — A History Of Hindu Chemistry From The Earliest Times To The Middle Of The Sixteenth Century A.D —which revealed to the world the path-breaking advances made by ancient Bharatiya scientists.
Today is the 159th Jayanti of Acharya PrafullaChandraRay
A brilliant scientist, educationist, historian, entrepreneur, philanthropist & a freedom fighter in his own way.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
Ray was such a fierce nationalist, he used to tell his students at Calcutta’s Presidency College with “Science can wait, SWARAJ cannot” call.
Born to HarishChandraRay
& Bhubanmohini Devi in Bangladesh on August 2, 1861, Prafulla attended a school founded by his family till he was 9. Later, the family moved to Calcutta where he and his elder brother enrolled at the Hare School. In 1874, a severe attack of dysentery forced him to leave
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
the school. The disease was slowly overcome, but it permanently injured his health; he became a life-long sufferer from chronic indigestion and sleeplessness. In his later days, he sometimes thought of this as a blessing in disguise. For the rest of his life, he was very strict
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
about his food; and he had regular exercise.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
He absorbed himself in biographies, articles on science, history, geography, Greek, Latin, French and Sanskrit. He completed matriculation from Albert School in 1879 and enrolled in Vidyasagar College but since it did not offer
science courses, he attended lectures in physics and chemistry at the Presidency College.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
Ray graduated from Edinburgh University before completing his doctoral studies and returning to Bharat in August 1888. The next year, he started teaching chemistry at Presidency College.
A prolific scientist, he wrote 107 papers in all branches of chemistry by 1920. He was knighted in 1919, and founded the Indian School of Chemistry (the first chemical research institute in the country) in 1924.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
Meanwhile, after returning to Bharat, Prafulla came to realize
that the drugs for Indian patients had to come from foreign countries at that time. He wanted to do something but was not rich. The family estates had been sold to pay his father’s debts and his salary was also meager. Still, he ventured upon this pioneering attempt. He prepared
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
some chemicals at home. His work grew so fast that a separate company had to be formed.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
But he needed capital – a capital of only eight hundred rupees. But it became difficult to raise even this small amount.
In spite of all these difficulties he founded
‘The Bengal Chemical and Pharmaceutical Works’ in 1901.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
With many accidental deaths within family, the entire responsibility of the factory fell on his shoulders. Still, he faced everything with courage.
Directly or indirectly he helped to start many other factories.
Textile mills, soap factories (today @swapan55 mentioned about his grandfather who started a soap factory) sugar factories, chemical industries, ceramic factories, and publishing houses were set up at the time with his active co-operation.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
He was the driving force behind the
industrialization of the country, which began at that time.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
During all these years, he was also actively engaged in research in his laboratory at Presidency College. His publications on Mercurous Nitrite and its derivatives brought him recognition from all over the world.
There was much that thought that Indians were backward in scientific knowledge and had received it only recently from the West. But Prafulla Chandra said that Indians knew little about their history. They did not know much about the devotion & industry with which our ancestors
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
developed knowledge.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
Prafulla Chandra was from the beginning interested in the work of the early Hindu chemists. After reading the famous book ‘Greek Alchemy’ by the great French scientist Berthelot his interest in Hindu Chemistry grew into a passion. He started reading many
ancient books in Sanskrit, Pali, Bengali, and other languages, which contained information on the subject. He wrote an article about a famous Sanskrit treatise
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
‘Rasendrasara Sangraha’ and sent it to Berthelot.
The French scientist published it with an introduction praising it
as an extremely interesting article. He wrote to Prafulla Chandra asking him to continue his research into the ancient texts and to publish a whole book on Hindu Chemistry.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
After several years of study, Prafulla published his famous book, ‘The History of Hindu Chemistry’
which received great praise from scientists all over the world. In this book, he has given a very interesting account to show that Hindu scientists knew about the manufacture of steel, about distillation, salts, mercury sulfides, etc… from very early times.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
Prafulla Chandra
said on one occasion that when the people of Europe did not know how to make clothes and were still wearing animal skins and wandering in forests, Indian scientists were manufacturing wonderful chemicals. This is something we should be proud of.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
But Prafulla Chandra also knew
that it is not enough to be proud of our past. We should follow the example of our ancestors and seek knowledge and progress in science.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
Prafulla Chandra did not rest content with giving such advice and he came with the 2nd volume of his Magnum Opus – Hindu Chemistry.
The two-volume book — the first was published in 1902 and the second in 1907 — also busted the myth that modern-day chemistry owes its origins to the alchemists of western Europe who derived their knowledge from the Arabs. Acharya Ray proved that the Arabs, in turn, had derived
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
their knowledge of rasashastra (as chemistry is called in Sanskrit) from ancient Hindus.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
Acharya who founded Bengal Chemicals & Pharmaceuticals, India’s first pharma company, in 1901, pored through voluminous ancient texts like the Upanishads, Vedas, the Arthashastra and other
ancient texts with the help of renowned Sanskrit scholars. He is credited with getting international recognition for not only ancient Indian chemistry, but also ayurveda.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
His book reveals that in the eighth century CE, the caliphs of Baghdad ordered extensive translation of
ayurvedic texts into Arabic and Persian and sent many of their renowned scholars to Bharata to study Ayurveda.
— ಅಲೆಮಾರಿ ಅಯ್ಯಂಗಾರಿ (@Sheshapatangi) August 2, 2020
END OF PART 1, PLEASE READ PART 2 FOR FURTHER ASTONISHING DETAILS. pic.twitter.com/zMpAhqymI3
Featured Image Credit: https://twitter.com/Sheshapatangi/status/1289982583191691271/photo/4