Dr Palmer examines the chronological stages to the development of the concept of valency up to 1930.Originally published in 1965, this book preserves the historical outlook of the different chronological stages to the development of the concept of valency by including extracts from the publications of the most influential scientists. Biographical notes and references are included and quotations from German are accompanied by an English translation.Originally published in 1965, this book preserves the historical outlook of the different chronological stages to the development of the concept of valency by including extracts from the publications of the most influential scientists. Biographical notes and references are included and quotations from German are accompanied by an English translation.The development of the concept of valency has provided one of the major unifying contributions to the growth of chemistry as a science. The study of its history is therefore of the greatest interest to all chemists and historians of chemistry. After 1930, wave mechanics provided a firm theoretical basis for the arbitrary postulates on which conceptions of atomic structure previously rested and this account, which was originally published in 1965, does not go beyond that point. Dr Palmer preserves the historical outlook of the different chronological stages by including extracts from the publications of the most influential scientists, in the nomenclature and terminology of their time; quotations from German are however accompanied by an English translation. Biographical notes and references help to bring alive the personalities of the scientists and to increase the appeal of the book to those who are not professional chemists or historians of science.jPreface; List of abbreviated titles; Introduction; 1. Dalton and Wollaston: early notions of chemical combination; 2. Berzelius: the dualistic theory; 3. Frankland, Couper and Kekul?: valency as an explicit doctrine; 4. Newlands, lÓq