In February 1912 in Munich, P. P Ewald, one of A. Sommerfeld's Ph.D. students, consulted M. Laue on matters related to crystal optics, his thesis subject. During the conversation, Laue conceived the idea that a crystal might act as a three-dimensional diffraction grating to the X-rays. Despite the idea having met with scepticism among his colleagues, Laue succeeded in getting the help of two of W. C. Roentgen's doctorands: F. Friedrich, Sommerfeld's laboratory assistant, and P. Knipping: to undertake the, by now, legendary experiments that originated a new branch of Physics. The results solved two fundamental questions of the time: namely are the X-rays electromagnetic radiation (light) of very short wavelength? And also, do the crystals ha...