Margarete von Wrangell originated from the old
Baltic German noble
house of Wrangel. She spent her childhood in Moscow,
Ufa and Reval (today
Tallinn). She attended a German girls’ school in Tallinn. After passing the teachers' qualifying examination with honours in 1894, she gave private lessons in science for several years. She also occupied herself in painting and writing short stories. Attending a botany course at
University of Greifswald in 1903 became a turning point in her life. As of spring 1904, she studied Natural Sciences in Leipzig and Tübingen and, in 1909, received her
PhD in chemistry from the
University of Tübingen summa cum laude. The topic of her
dissertation was 'Isomerism of Formyl-glutaconic Acid ester and its bromine derivatives'. This was followed by years of further scientific study and travel. In 1909, she worked as an assistant at the Agricultural Experimental Station in
Dorpat; in 1910, she participated in the work of
William Ramsay in London in the field of
radiation; in 1911, she became an assistant at the Institute of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry in
Strasbourg; and in 1912, she worked for several months with
Marie Curie at the
Curie Institute in Paris. At the end of 1912, she became head of the Estonian Agricultural Experimental Station of the Agricultural Association in Reval. Her main task was overseeing
seed,
feeds and
fertilizers. In the course of the Russian
October Revolution, her institute was closed; she was arrested, but managed to flee to Germany in 1918. == Research ==