Accession No

1232


Brief Description

compound microscope, box type, French, 2/2 18th Century


Origin

France


Maker


Class

microscopes


Earliest Date

1750


Latest Date

1800


Inscription Date


Material

glass; metal (brass, other metal); wood (lignum vitae, other wood)


Dimensions

overall microscope height 395mm; depth 114mm; breadth 120mm


Special Collection


Provenance


Inscription


Description Notes

Rectangular box base; soft wood with stained grain; drawer with knob handle in base; (1 piece of side beading a replacement) silver painted decoration; 4 pillars set into lid; 2 brass plates with central aperture mounted on pillars with springs below; crude stage forceps; brass pillar; brass body attached to pillar by collar and pair of brass plates with spring clips; screw clamp through collar (body badly marked from screw): Body of pasteboard with brass outer skin; lignum vitae snout; screw fit cell for objective; push fit draw tube (same construction as body) with screw fit lignum vitae cell for field lens and eyepiece.


References


Events

Description
The Compound microscope was developed during the 17th Century and was closely related to the refracting telescope. Its popularity increased after the publication in 1665 of Robert Hooke’s (1635-1703) Micrographia. Micrographia contained detailed pictures, never before seen, of insects magnified using a compound microscope.

A compound microscope uses two or more lenses. The lenses are held at certain distances from each other and are mounted inside a rigid tube. The tube was usually made from pasteboard, ivory or most commonly brass. The basic compound microscope magnifies an image in two stages;

Stage One: Light from a mirror is reflected up through the specimen into a powerful objective lens.

Stage Two: The image produced by the objective lens is magnified again by the eye lens, which works like a simple magnifying lens.

The first compound microscope consisted of a simple barrel which would have been held up to the light. Later developments ensured that the compound microscope had a stable base, usually a brass stand and a side pillar.

In the 17th Century the compound microscope had some serious drawbacks which made it easier to use a simple microscope (which has only one lens) instead. The image produced by a compound microscope was often affected by two types of aberrations known as chromatic and spherical. These aberrations caused blurring to the image (spherical) and the edge of the specimen to colour (chromatic). Chromatic aberration was removed at the end of the 18th Century by Harmanus van Deijlan, an instrument maker in Amsterdam. In 1830, spherical aberration was overcome by Joseph Lister who developed the achromatic lens. Achromatic lenses became widely used in microscopes in the 1850s and are still used today.


FM:42938

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