Arthur Harden Born: 12-Oct-1865 Birthplace: Manchester, Lancashire, England Died: 17-Jun-1940 Location of death: Bourne, Buckinghamshire, England Cause of death: unspecified
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Chemist Nationality: England Executive summary: Enzymes of sugar fermentation British chemist Arthur Harden was raised in a non-religious and non-conformist family, and made fundamental discoveries in the chemistry of sugar and fermentative enzymes, including the requirement that phosphates be present for fermentation. He was honored with the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1929. He also studied how carbon dioxide and chlorine react to light. Father: Albert Tyas Harden Mother: Eliza Macalister Wife: Georgina Sydney Bridge (m. 1900, d. 1928, no children)
High School: Tettenhall College, Staffordshire, England (1881) University: BS, Owens College, University of Manchester (1885) University: University of Erlangen Lecturer: University of Manchester (1888-97) Professor: Biochemistry, University of London (1912-30)
Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1929 (with Hans von Euler-Chelpin) Davy Medal 1935 Knight of the British Empire 1926 Lister Institute Chemist (1897-1907)
Lister Institute Director of Biochemistry (1907-30)
The Biochemical Journal Co-Editor (1913-38)
Royal Society 1909 Lunar Crater Harden (5.5° N 143.5° E, 15 km. diameter) English Ancestry
Author of books:
A New View of the Origin of Dalton's Atomic Theory (1896, non-fiction; with Henry E. Roscoe) Inorganic Chemistry for Advanced Students (1903, testbook; with Henry E. Roscoe) Alcoholic Fermentation (1911, non-fiction)
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