Accession No

0299


Brief Description

simple microscope, lyonnet dissecting type; circa 1790


Origin


Maker


Class

microscopes


Earliest Date

1790


Latest Date

1790


Inscription Date


Material

wood (pine, mahogany); metal (brass, white metal); ivory; glass; cloth (baize)


Dimensions

base length 165mm; base breadth 164mm; overall height 250m height to stage 162mm; accessory diameter 27mm


Special Collection

Robert Whipple collection


Provenance

Purchased from R.S. Clay on 12/02/1926.


Inscription


Description Notes

Square wooden base with mahogany veneer; fitted mahogany drawer lined with green baize; brass column screws into brass plate in box lid. Replacement oval wooden stage with brass aperture and glass plate (missing). Nut holds stage to column; Musschenbroek nuts to mount for eyepiece (eyepiece and lieberkuhn which do not fit). Swinging plane mirror fits into brass plate on base; 4 x 4-object ivory slides.

Condition: good; complete


References


Events

Description
The simple microscope is essentially one lens, or one thick lens which is composed of two or three pieces of glass. The simple microscope has a short focal length which means that in order to focus clearly the microscope has to be held up to the eye. The magnifying power in this type of microscope ranged from 70 to 250 times.

Antoni van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723) was a cloth merchant from Delft and made the earliest surviving examples of a simple microscope. Leeuwenhoek crafted the lens from glass beads and mounted the lens in between metal plates. A spike was used to hold the specimen close to the lens and the microscope was then handheld in front of the eye. Leeuwenhoek was the first person to see bacteria. The capillary circulation of the blood, as discovered and demonstrated by Marcello Mapighi could also be observed through a simple microscope. The simple microscope remained in use alongside the compound microscope, as it was a useful alternative if clear images could not be viewed through compound microscopes.

In the early years of the 18th Century, many simple microscopes were of the screw barrel type ,which were produced in ivory or brass. Those particularly interested in the natural world used simple microscopes as they were portable and very useful for work in the field. The botanical microscope as seen in the microscope case (accession number 0587) would open out as the box itself was opened making it immediately ready for use.
01/03/2001
Created by: Corrina Bower on 01/03/2001


FM:40056

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