Marie Curie is one of the most well-known scientists in history, famous for her work in physics and chemistry, for being the first woman to be awarded the Nobel Prize and the first person to be awarded it twice, in two different fields no less. Yet despite her pioneering fame, many people also wrongly believe that Madame Curie was French, when in fact she hails from Poland, where she is known as Maria Skłodowska-Curie.
Curie lived in Warsaw as a child, in a building that is now a biographical museum honoring the remarkable scientist and her pioneering work. Though she became a French citizen, Curie never forgot her link to Poland and visited often with her husband and children. In fact, she even named one of the elements she discovered, polonium, after her native country.
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