Le laboratoire de céramique de Böttger, dans le château d'Albert, en Saxe. Johann Friedrich Böttger (4 février 1682 - 13 mars 1719) était un alche allemand
The ceramic laboratory of Böttger, in the castle of Albert, in Saxony. Johann Friedrich Böttger (February 4, 1682 - March 13, 1719) was a German alchemist credited with being the first European to discover the secret of the creation of hard-paste porcelain in 1708, but it has also been claimed that Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus produced porcelain first. Around 1700, as an apprentice chemist, he locked himself up to discover the Goldmachertinktur, an alchemist's secret substance that could cure any disease and convert base metals into gold. The monarch of Saxony Augustus II of Poland, who was always short of money, demanded that Böttger produce the Goldmachertinktur. In 1704, von Tschirnhaus was ordered to oversee the goldmaker. In 1707 the king went to the new laboratory that had been furnished for von Tschirnhaus in what is today Brühlsche Terrasse in order to examine the invention. The Meissen factory, established 1710, was the first to produce porcelain in Europe in large quantities and since the recipe was kept a trade secret by Böttger for his company, experiments continued elsewhere throughout Europe.