Accession No

3638


Brief Description

illustration of Culpeper’s screw barrel microscope; 18th Century


Origin


Maker


Class

microscopes; ephemera


Earliest Date

1700


Latest Date

1800


Inscription Date


Material

paper


Dimensions

breadth 215mm; height 104mm


Special Collection


Provenance


Inscription


Description Notes

Fold-out illustration of Culpeper’s screw-barrel microscope. Printed. Black and white. Taken from an instruction manual for the microscope.

Condition good; complete


References


Events

Description
This type of simple microscope, employing only one lens, was first described in 1702, by James Wilson in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. The design was in fact the work of the Dutch microscopist Nicolaas Hartsoeker.

The essential feature of the design is the threaded cylinder, carrying a condensing lens, which screws in and out of the body. The microscope is hand-held, and the slide is inserted at one end — the whole instrument is then pointed towards a light source.

Large numbers of these microscopes were made, and they proved extremely popular. This was in part due to the recommendation of John Harris, in his 1704 book Lexicon Technicum, in which he wrote that “of all microscopes I have ever seen for commodiousness, various uses, portability and cheapness, I never met with anything like Mr. Wilson’s Glasses.”
26/02/2008
Created by: Boris Jardine, with text from Olivia Brown’s Catalogue 7 on 26/02/2008


FM:42126

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