An 18th-century alchemist working in a Berlin basement inadvertently changed the visual landscape of European warfare. By mixing animal blood with contaminated potash in an attempt to create crimson, he birthed the first modern synthetic pigment: an incredibly stable, deep azure.
Prior to this accident, dyeing cloth blue required the expensive and logistically fragile importation of indigo. The Kingdom of Prussia recognized the strategic brilliance of this new chemical compound immediately. By monopolizing the iron-cyanide synthesis, the state could suddenly outfit massive standing armies in uniform, intimidating colors at a fraction of the traditional cost. This massive economic advantage triggered a desperate race among rival nations to infiltrate Prussian dye houses and steal the formula.
Trace the geopolitical impact of a single chemical reaction. Understand how an alchemical mistake birthed a synthetic monopoly that standardized the modern military uniform and funded the rise of a European superpower.