In 1885-1917 Petre Melikishvili was a professor in the Department of Agronomic Chemistry at the University of
Novorossiysk. Petre Melikishvili showed great interest in the emancipation of women. he sent his sister to France to get higher education and was active in getting Georgian women to get higher education abroad. In 1905 he actively participated in the formation of the Odessa Women's Higher Courses. In 1906, the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics was opened for women courses. In October of the same year, Petre Melikishvili was elected dean of the faculty. In 1875 he published two papers in the field of
physical chemistry. Petre Melikishvili laid the foundation for the creation of chemical terminology in the Georgian language, which was later developed by his students
Nino Tsitsishvili and
Rusudan Nikoladze.
Meteorites and agrochemistry In the 1890s, Petre Melikishvili became interested in the nature of
meteorites. He studied meteorites which fell in different places, including: Tsmeti, Zabrod, Migey, Vakulov and others. After chemical research of meteorites, it was concluded that they contain the same chemical elements as the
Earth. The Migay meteorite differed from others in that it contained
coal,
sulfur,
phosphorus, and
organic compounds, namely higher
hydrocarbons. Petre Melikishvili also studied minerals and agricultural products. His field of research included:
wine,
cheese,
tea, etc. As a result of chemical analysis of wine and
wheat, he concluded that the quality of these products is influenced by climatic conditions and time. after researching Chakvi tea with M. Rosenblatt, he found that the
subtropical climate and
soil in western Georgia were suitable for tea plantation cultivation. Petre Melikishvili owns the following researches: "Chemical composition of Turkish wheat", "Wines of Odessa region", "Investigation of wheat of southern Russia", "Gluten exchange", "Wines of Kherson province", "Chemical composition of Russian sheep cheese", "Analysis of Russian sheep cheese", etc which were published in various editions of the
Russian Empire. In 1896, Petre Melikishvili published a study on natural soda, in which the issue of its formation was discussed.
Inorganic chemistry In 1897 Petre Melikishvili started working in the field of inorganic chemistry and wrote more than 20 papers in this field. The
Russian Academy of Sciences has published these studies under the title "Peroxides and Super Acids". Petre Melikishvili was awarded the
Lomonosov Gold Medal together with
Lev Pisarzhevsky for these examinations. According to
Dmitry Mendeleev, their works "perfected the periodic table of the chemical elements." == In Tbilisi State University ==