Accession No
1785
Brief Description
compound microscope, culpeper type; circa 1745
Origin
Maker
Class
microscopes
Earliest Date
1745
Latest Date
1745
Inscription Date
Material
wood (hardwood, softwood, ebony, lignum vitae, mahogany); glass; metal (brass); paper (pasteboard, card); fishskin (shagreen); hide (vellum); organic (horn); ivory
Dimensions
height 420mm; depth 175mm; breadth 172mm
Special Collection
Heywood collection
Provenance
Purchased from the H.Heywood collection under estate duty exemption benefit with the assistance of a Science Museum grant-in-aid.
Inscription
Description Notes
Octagonal box-foot with drawer fitted for accessories; soft wood core with hardwood facing; ring foot with 3 braces supporting swinging concave mirror in brass mount; 3 curved diamond cross-section legs with notches supporting stage-plate; spring stage; fittings for stage forceps, frog plate etc.; brass ring supports [ebony] ferrule and pasteboard collar covered in black shagreen; pasteboard body covered with green vellum marked in ink with dots and ‘1-5’; lignum vitae ferrules either end to lignum vitae snout with brass screw-thread, lignum vitae eyepiece with field lens in a horn cell and eye lens in a lignum vitae cell; brass screw fit sliding lens cover.
Accessories include 5 brass objectives marked ‘1-5’; ivory talc and ring box; brass tweezers; lieberkuhn (broken); cone; square black and white ground; card slip case covered with black shagreen containing eight 4-object ivory slides (2 sets of 3 and 5); one 6-object mahogany slide (broken).
References
Events
Description
The 'culpeper' type microscope
Edmund Culpeper, an instrument maker and engraver of outstanding quality developed the tripod compound microscope in the early 18th century. He mounted the body on two tiers with tripod legs and added a mirror below the stage ( the part that holds the specimen). This made it possible to illuminate the specimen from below without having to hold the instrument to the light.
The 'Culpeper' form of microscope quickly became immensely popular and the design was copied by all the leading instrument makers of the 18th century. The materials used gradually changed as the century progressed, from leather, wood and brass, to all brass by 1800.
More on compound microscopes
Culpeper type microscopes are compound microscopes, which use two or more lenses. The compound microscope developed during the 17th century and was closely related to the refracting telescope. It’s popularity increased after the publication of Robert Hooke’s (1635-1703) Micrographia in 1665. Micrographia contained detailed pictures, never before seen, of insects magnified using a compound microscope.
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 brass, with later examples mostly made of 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 (had only one lens) instead. The image produced by a compound microscope was often affected by two types of aberration 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 from the 1850s through to the modern day.
30/08/2006
Created by: Corrina Bower; updated by Ruth Horry on 30/08/2006
FM:42961
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