Zaytsev was born in
Kazan. He was the son of a tea and sugar merchant, who had decided that his son should follow him into the mercantile trades. However, at the urging of his maternal uncle, Zaytsev was allowed to enroll at
University of Kazan to study economics. At this time, Russia was experimenting with the
cameral system, meaning that every student graduating in law and economics from a Russian university had to take two years of chemistry. Zaytsev was thus introduced to
Aleksandr Mikhailovich Butlerov. Early on, Zaytsev began working with Butlerov, who clearly saw in him an excellent laboratory chemist, and whose later actions showed that he felt that Zaytsev was an asset to Russian
organic chemistry. On the death of his father, Zaytsev took his
diplom in 1862, and immediately went to western Europe to further his chemical studies, studying with
Hermann Kolbe in
Marburg, and with
Charles Adolphe Wurtz in Paris. This went directly against the accepted norms of the day, which had the student complete the
kandidat degree (today approximately equivalent to the doctor of philosophy degree, but then closer to the thesis for the B.Sc. (Hons.) degree in British universities), and then spend two or three years in study abroad (a
komandirovka) before returning to
Russia as a salaried laboratory assistant studying for the doctorate. During his studies with Kolbe between 1862 and 1864, Zaytsev discovered
sulfoxides and trialkyl
sulfonium salts. In 1864, he moved to
Paris, where he worked for a year in the laboratories of Wurtz before returning to Marburg in 1865. At this time, Kolbe accepted a call to
Leipzig, and Zaytsev, now out of money, returned to Russia. Upon his return, Zaytsev again joined Butlerov as an unpaid assistant. During this time, he wrote a successful
kandidat dissertation. ==Career==