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2009 | 54 | 1 | 63-82

Article title

AN ALCHEMIST OR SWINDLER ? THE CASE OF ZBIGNIEW DUNIKOWSKI (Alchemik czy oszust? Sprawa Zbigniewa Dunikowskiego)

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
In early 1930s the newspapers and street journals in Europe and the United States were frequently reporting on a case of Zbigniew Dunikowski, a Polish engineer, who claimed to be in possession of a secret formula allowing production of gold from ordinary sand and rocks. He believed that most of those materials contain some particles of gold. For the precious metal however, it takes millions of years to precipitate into the ledges that could be mined. His method was based on a conviction, that the process can be accelerated. Although he was nicknamed 'Polish alchemist' very soon, his vain promises attracted attention of financiers and even some European political leaders. After few years of futile experiments, he was sued by his impatient financial backers, and arrested. While in detention, he was allowed to make the last attempt to produce gold and regain his repute and freedom. When this attempt failed, the judge sentenced him for two years in prison and ordered him to repay some 3 million francs ($100,000) to his investors. He was also fined with ... 100 francs fine (some 4 dollars). It can not be definitively stated, whether Dunikowski was truly convicted that his formula for making gold could have been working or he acted as a swindler from the very beginning. He exclaimed that the accusation of fraud was caused by bankers, who would never let his method to undermine the status quo of world's economy. The experiments conducted in Ecole Centrale in Paris during his trial, were assisted by several eminent French scientist. But although the judge sentenced, that Dunikowki's 'secret process for turning sand into gold is an impracticable combination of absurdities and contradictions', Polish engineer was still able to find other backers after being released from French prison. We find the traces of his further activity in Italy, Switzerland, Belgium and Philippines. Finally, in early 1950s he ended his journey in the United States as a political refugee.

Keywords

Discipline

Year

Volume

54

Issue

1

Pages

63-82

Physical description

Document type

ARTICLE

Contributors

  • Slawomir Lotysz, Uniwersytet Zielonogórski, ul. Podgórna 50, 63-246 Zielona Góra, Poland

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
09PLAAAA06842

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.f1fc656d-5807-3993-8b84-88fc83235bc7
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