Accession No
4423
Brief Description
Leyden jar, late 19th Century
Origin
Maker
Class
electrical
Earliest Date
1875
Latest Date
1900
Inscription Date
Material
glass; metal; wood (mahogany)
Dimensions
height 210mm; maximum diameter 63mm
Special Collection
Provenance
Purchased in Christie’s Nicholas Webster Collection sale, 26/09/1991, lot 22.
Inscription
Description Notes
Glass jar semi-covered with metallic paper, inside and out. Mahogany circular top with metal rod sticking through into the jar.
Condition: good; complete.
References
Events
Description
Leyden jars are used to store electric charge and were a very early form of capacitor (a device used to store electric charge in electronic equipment such as a television or computer). The device was named “bouteille de Leyden”. This was after the first experiments that were carried out by Peter Musschenbroek and Andreas Cunaeus in Leyden, Holland in the 1740’s.
The discovery of the leyden jar was very important in the development of electrical theory in the second half of the 18th century. It became possible to study more powerful electrical charges and develop new concepts such as the electrical circuit, the area of surface electrified and the amount of charge. Before the invention of the leyden jar the electric charges that were produced could not be contained anywhere for long enough to be used or studied.
To use the leyden jar, it would have been first charged by an electrostatic machine such as a Wimshurst machine. The electric charge flows down the metal chain or rod to a metal coating inside the jar, consisting of lead or tin foil. Because of the glass material of the jar the electricity cannot leak out and so builds up inside the jar. To discharge the jar a curved rod was used which would have been held near the metal ball on the lid and the outer foil of the jar which causes a spark to occur.
FM:44376
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