His academic collaborators were some of the most important scientists in the world, including Robert Bunsen, Georg Ludwig Carius, Emil Erlenmeyer and Gustav Kirchhoff.
With the onset of the Industrial Revolution, Christomanos and his contemporaries were pioneers of modern education all over the world.
They were an important aristocratic Greek family, claiming roots in the Byzantine Empire.
Christomanos' most important scientific work was the determination of the specific gravity of silver, methods for the determination of alkali metals, artificial biphenyl synthesis and the composition of chromite ores in Greece.
There he studied with notable Viennese scientist Franz Josef Pisko and Anton Schrötter von Kristelli.
Anastasios' studies advanced very quickly he eventually was associated with Justus von Liebig and Robert Bunsen.
In the late 1850s, Anastasios eventually participated in the lab experiments of Bunsen and Kirchhoff.
Greek American naval artillery chemist and pyrotechnist George Marshall relayed the acceptable scientific education used by the U.S. Navy in his book Marshall's Practical Marine Gunnery in 1822.
Chemical compounds were also called crude archaic names and the periodic table was not discovered.
He was the first Greek chemist to construct and implement Greek nomenclature for chemical processes and chemical compounds namely the new elements and procedures discovered by his academic professors and colleagues in Germany and other parts of the world.
He organized the equipment and physical chemistry education at the Hellenic Military Academy.
By the year 1866, he used his knowledge of advanced spectroscopy to study the newly erupted volcano in Santorini.
She was the daughter of prominent Bavarian doctor Otto Von Lindermayer and Catherine Prokopiou Venizelos.
Anastasios invited world-renowned German scientist Hans Max Jahn to teach in Athens.
He added three new chemical facilities and the massive university laboratory on Solonos Street.
By the 1890s another important Greek student of Robert Bunsen was affiliated with the chemistry department named Anastasios Damvergis.
During his busy schedule, Christomanos also found time to communicate and stay active within the academic community of chemistry.
[8] By the mid-1890s Chrisomanos and professors Konstantinos Mitsopoulos, Timoleon Argyropoulos, Spyridon Miliarakis, Nikolaos Apostolides, and Anastasios Damvergis filed a memorandum to the Greek state.
[14][15] Christomanos' contributions to the field of chemistry included developing an apparatus for the estimation of carbonic anhydride.