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Eva Ekeblad

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Citizenship
  
Swedish

Fields
  
Agronomy


Name
  
Eva Ekeblad

Role
  
Plant Scientist

Eva Ekeblad Eva Ekeblad f De la Gardie Svenskt Biografiskt Lexikon

Residence
  
Stockholm and Vastergotland

Known for
  
Making alcohol of potatoes (1746)

Influenced
  
Reduced the hunger by making potatoes a basic food.

Notable awards
  
Membership in the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (1748)

Died
  
May 15, 1786, Lidkoping, Sweden

Children
  
Claes Julius Ekeblad, Hedvig Catharina Piper

Books
  
Children, learning, numbers

Parents
  
Hedvig Catharina De la Gardie, Magnus Julius De la Gardie

Siblings
  
Hedvig Catharina von Fersen

Grandparents
  
Agneta Wrede, Axel Julius De la Gardie

Similar People
 
Magnus Julius De la Gardie, Hedvig Catharina von Fersen, Carl Linnaeus, Anders Celsius, Christopher Polhem

Eva Ekeblad-Swedish agronomist, scientist-discovery was to make flour and alcohol out of potatoes.


Eva Ekeblad (née Eva De la Gardie; 10 July 1724 – 15 May 1786) was a Swedish countess who was a salon hostess, agronomist, and scientist. She was widely known for discovering a method in 1746 to make alcohol and flour from potatoes, allowing greater use of scarce grains for food production, significantly reducing Sweden's incidence of famine.

Contents

Eva Ekeblad Presentation quotEva Ekeblad Sveriges frsta vetenskapskvinna

Ekeblad was the first female member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (1748).

Eva Ekeblad httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons22

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Personal life

Eva Ekeblad Eva Ekeblad de la Gardie Le Bistrot de Wasahof

Eva De la Gardie was born to statesman count Magnus Julius De la Gardie (1668–1741) and the amateur politician and salonist Hedvig Catharina Lilje: sister of Captain Carl Julius De la Gardie and Hedvig Catharina De la Gardie and the aunt of Axel von Fersen the Younger. Her brother was married to Cathérine Charlotte De la Gardie and the brother-in-law of the royal favorite Hedvig Taube.

Eva Ekeblad 6 Cool Facts About Eva Ekeblad The Scientist Who Made Vodka From

In 1740, Eva married at the age of 16 the riksråd count Claes Claesson Ekeblad, and became the mother of seven children; one son and six daughters, Claes Julius Ekeblad (1742–1808) and Hedda Piper among them. Their spouses belonged to the elite of the Swedish nobility.

Eva Ekeblad Why the world is talking about 18th century scientist Eva Ekeblad

Upon her marriage, her father, Julius De la Gardie, gave Eva the estates Mariedal Castle and Lindholmen Castle, Västergötland. Her husband, additionally, owned the Stola Manor estate as well as a residence in the capital of Stockholm.

Eva Ekeblad Who was Eva Ekeblad Google Doodle thanks Swedish scientist for

Because of the frequent absence of her husband on business, Eva Ekeblad was given the responsibility of the management of the three estates, including the tasks of supervising the bailiffs and presiding at the country-assemblies of the parishes of the estates. She is described as imposing and temperamental with great authority: fair toward the peasantry, whom she protected against abuse from the bailiffs in return for obedience, and as someone who did not hesitate to rectify and punish wrongdoings during conflicts with local dignitaries. She also had a leading role in the local aristocracy, and Stola manor was renowned for its good order.

In the Ekeblad residence in Stockholm, she hosted a cultural salon and was described by the wife of the Spanish Ambassador de marquis de Puentefuerte as "one of few aristocratic ladies whose honor was considered untainted". The first concert performances of the mass music of Johan Helmich Roman were performed in her salon at the Ekeblad House. She was on friendly terms with queen Louisa Ulrika.

After the death of her husband in 1771, she retired to the countryside. Mariedal and Lindholmen estates served as her dower estates, the former being her personal residence. She initially also kept control of her son's estate Stola, he being also absent from his estates like his father because of his career.

In 1775, her son Claes Julius Ekeblad (1742–1808) married Brita Horn, and three years afterwards Stola manor was granted to her daughter-in-law as a dower. In November 1778, Eva Ekeblad was present as a witness at the birth of the future Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden. She stayed in the capital for two years, during which time she was much celebrated and offered several positions at court: as a lady-in-waiting to the queen; as överhovmästarinna (Mistress of the Robes) in succession to Ulrika Strömfelt; and as royal governess for the Crown Prince. She was forced to refuse, however, because her hitherto good health was affected by an illness that year which left her much weakened and made her periodically bedridden for her remaining eight years. She spent her last six years in Mariedal Castle, where she continued to be celebrated by the local aristocracy until she died.

Scientific work

In 1746, Ekeblad wrote to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences on her discoveries of how to make flour and alcohol out of potatoes. Potatoes had been introduced into Sweden in 1658, but had been cultivated only in the greenhouses of the aristocracy. Ekeblad's work turned potatoes into a staple food in Sweden, and increased the supply of wheat, rye and barley available for making bread, since potatoes could be used instead to make alcohol. This greatly improved the country's eating habits and reduced the frequency of famines.

She also discovered a method of bleaching cotton textile and yarn with soap in 1751, and of replacing the dangerous ingredients in cosmetics of the time by using potato flour (1752); she is said to have advertised the plant by using its flowers as hair ornaments.

In 1748, Eva Ekeblad became the first woman elected to Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. There are no records of her ever having participated in the meetings of the Academy. In 1751, the Academy came to refer to her as an honorary rather than a full member, as the statutes confined membership to men.

References

Eva Ekeblad Wikipedia