Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Biography. Her father, Jacques Paulze, worked primarily as a parliamentary lawyer and financier. Most of his income came from running the Ferme Générale (the General Farm) which was a private consortium of financiers who paid the French monarchy for the privilege of collecting certain taxes.

  3. Born in 1758, Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze was educated in a convent but only until age 12. In 1771, her father arranged for her to marry 28-year-old Antoine Lavoisier, avoiding a ...

  4. Marie Anne Pierrette Paulze was a significant contributor to the understanding of chemistry in the late 1700s. Marie Anne married Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, known as the ‘Father of Modern Chemistry,’ and was his chief collaborator and laboratory assistant.

    • Cassandra T. Eagle, Jennifer Sloan
    • 1998
  5. Marie's father Jacques Paulze was director of the royal tobacco commission. After her mother Claudine Thoynet Paulze 's death, Marie was brought back to Paris from the convent where she had been sent for her education and served as hostess of her father's lavish entertainments.

  6. Dec 1, 2013 · Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze was born in the province of Loire to an aristocratic family . As mentioned above, her father was a senior member of the Ferme Générale. Marie-Anne's mother died when she was young, and she was schooled in a convent where the education was excellent.

    • John B. West
    • 2013
  7. Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze Lavoisier was a French chemist and noble. She was the wife of Antoine Lavoisier and acted as his laboratory companion and contributed to his work. Her father, Jacques Paulze, worked primarily as a parliamentary lawyer and financier.

  8. Mar 16, 2024 · Marie-Anne Paulze Lavoisier was an 18th-century scholar, translator, and illustrator who is considered to be the mother of modern chemistry.