[1][6] He also studied at the Naturwissenschaften Leipzig from 1892 to 1893;[6][7] with Gabriel Lippmann at the Sorbonne in Paris from 1893 to 1894;[6] and in the laboratory of the Akademie der Wissenschaften in St. Petersburg from 1894 to 1895.
[1] In 1911, Eduard von Stackelberg published a paper discussing a possible model for the periodic table, Versuch einer neuen tabellarischen Gruppierung der Elemente auf Grund des periodischen Systems ("A New Tabular Grouping of the elements on the basis of the periodic system").
It was positively reviewed in Chemical Abstracts: "The author gives a form of periodic table, which possesses certain advantages, especially that it aids in enabling one to remember the variation of certain physical and chem.
Eduard's son Mark von Stackelberg studied chemistry with his uncle Andreas von Antropoff, completing his dissertation at the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität,[11] and co-authoring an extensive discussion of the periodic table in the Atlas der physikalischen und anorganischen Chemie ("Atlas of physical and inorganic chemistry; The properties of the elements and their connections", 1929).
[18] The association promoted a pan-Baltic organization, in sympathy with pan-Germanic ideals, while emphasizing that it still supported the Russian Tsar and constitution.
He quarreled severely with Count Hermann von Keyserling, leader of a more cosmopolitan group of exiled Baltic Germans.
[20] After the signing of the Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty, which allowed deportees to return, he moved to Germany, where his wife still owned land in Lochen.
[1][7][17] In 1927-1934, Stackelberg wrote a two-part memoir, A life in the Baltic struggle; Looking back on what is aspired, lost and won.