PERSONEN FILTERS: pagina=1, s=, field=instrument making, publicaties=
Gevonden personen:
Member Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Instrument maker, son of John Dolland who made the achromatic telescope. After his death, his son, Peter, did take action to enforce the patent his father had received for the instrument. A number of his competitors, including Bass, Benjamin Martin, Robert Rew and Jesse Ramsden, took action. Dollond's patent was upheld, as the court found that the patent was valid due to Dollond's exploitation of the invention while prior inventors did not. Several of the opticians were ruined by the expense of the legal proceedings and closed their shops as a result. William Eastland, John and Jonathan Cuthbertson and James Champneys subsequently moved to The Netherlands. The patent remained valid until it expired in 1772. Following the expiry of the patent, the price of achromatic doublets in England dropped in half. [Wikipedia]
Residence
N/AOccupation
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Archive Museum Boerhaave
Publications
N/AMember Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Succeeded his father as the owner of a 'twinderij'.
Residence
- Haarlem 
Occupation
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Archive Museum Boerhaave
Publications
N/AWiki and VIAF
Wiki Data: N/AVIAF: N/A
Member Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Instrument maker and jeweler from The Hague, disciple and later colleague of William Eastlandt. Had his own workshop (Eastlandt & Comp.), where he sold optical instruments. He also worked as a 'custos', a technical assistant of the Gezelschap ter beoefening der Proefondervindelijke Wysbegeerte (from 1805: Maatschappij voor Natuur- en Letterkunde 'Diligentia').
Residence
N/AOccupation
- Custos 1803 - Gezelschap ter Beoeffening der proefondervindelijke Wijsbegeerte in ’s Hage
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Zuidervaart, H.J. 'De doos van Pandora', in: Studium 3 (2011), 171-180.
Publications
N/AMember Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Clock maker from Leeuwarden, Friesland (Groenmarkt). After his passing in 1761 his clock-making workshop was taken over by Klaas Kroon. His work can be found at Princessehof Leeuwarden.
Residence
N/AOccupation
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Archive Museum Boerhaave
Publications
N/AWiki and VIAF
Wiki Data: N/AVIAF: N/A
Member Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
After her husband's death (Gerhard Leendertsz Valk) in 1726 she continued the company in globe making and publishing.
Residence
N/AOccupation
- Globe maker 1726 - 1729, Amsterdam
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Archive Museum Boerhaave
Publications
N/AWiki and VIAF
Wiki Data: N/AVIAF: N/A
Member Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Instrument- and | or compass maker in Rotterdam, ca 1711-1720. Mentioned in notary archives of Rotterdam.
Residence
- Rotterdam 1711 - 1720
Occupation
- Instrument- and/or compass maker 1711 - 1721, Rotterdam
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Archive Museum Boerhaave
Publications
N/AWiki and VIAF
Wiki Data: N/AVIAF: N/A
Member Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Instrument maker from Antwerp, Belgium.
Residence
N/AOccupation
- Instrument maker Boerhaave 
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Archive Museum Boerhaave
Publications
N/AWiki and VIAF
Wiki Data: N/AVIAF: N/A
Member Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Together with her husband P.M. Tamson she founded the company 'P.M. Tamson' in the Hague in 1878. They produced all kinds of instruments: for the cultivation and collection of animals and plants, physics education, science, laboratories (including hospital laboratories). Their daughter and her husband (Hendrik Johan ten Have) took over the company in 1914.
Residence
- Den Haag 
Occupation
- Instrument maker 1878, Den Haag
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Archive Museum Boerhaave
Publications
N/AWiki and VIAF
Wiki Data: N/AVIAF: N/A
Member Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Dollond was the son of a Huguenot refugee, a silk-weaver at Spitalfields, London, where he was born. He followed his father's trade, but found time to acquire a knowledge of Latin, Greek, mathematics, physics, anatomy and other subjects. In 1752 he abandoned silk-weaving and joined his eldest son, Peter Dollond, who in 1750 had started in business as a maker of optical instruments. His reputation grew rapidly, and in 1761 he was appointed optician to the king. In 1758 he published an "Account of some experiments concerning the different refrangibility of light", describing the experiments that led him to the achievement with which his name is specially associated, the discovery of a means of constructing achromatic lenses by the combination of crown and flint glasses, which reduces chromatic aberration (color defects). Leonhard Euler in 1747 had suggested that achromatism might be obtained by the combination of glass and water lenses. Relying on statements made by Sir Isaac Newton, Dollond disputed this possibility, but subsequently, after the Swedish physicist, Samuel Klingenstierna, had pointed out that Newton's law of dispersion did not harmonize with certain observed facts, he began experiments to settle the question. Early in 1757 he succeeded in producing refraction without colour by the aid of glass and water lenses, and a few months later he made a successful attempt to get the same result by a combination of glasses of different qualities. For this achievement the Royal Society awarded him the Copley Medal in 1758, and three years later elected him one of its fellows. Dollond also published two papers on apparatus for measuring small angles. John Dollond was the first person to patent the achromatic doublet. However, it is well known that he was not the first to make achromatic lenses. Optician George Bass, following the instructions of Chester Moore Hall, made and sold such lenses as early as 1733. In the late 1750s, Bass told Dollond about Hall's design, Dollond saw the potential and was able to reproduce them. Dollond appears to have known of the prior work and refrained from enforcing his patent. After his death, his son, Peter, did take action to enforce the patent. A number of his competitors, including Bass, Benjamin Martin, Robert Rew and Jesse Ramsden, took action. Dollond's patent was upheld, as the court found that the patent was valid due to Dollond's exploitation of the invention while prior inventors did not. Several of the opticians were ruined by the expense of the legal proceedings and closed their shops as a result. William Eastland, John and Jonathan Cuthbertson and James Champneys subsequently moved to The Netherlands. The patent remained valid until it expired in 1772. Following the expiry of the patent, the price of achromatic doublets in England dropped in half. [Wikipedia]
Residence
N/AOccupation
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
- Royal Society of London
Fellow 
Provenance
- List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 - 2007. A complete listing of all Fellows and Foreign Members since the foundation of the Society. A-J / K-Z. The Royal Society, Library and Information Services. July 2007
Publications
N/AMember Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
- KNAW-Lid
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Mathematician and scientific instrument maker in Enschede and Amsterdam. He made a planetarium which is destroyed by fire in Enschede 1862, he made also some weights (one for J.H. van Swinden). Was also an astronomical and a meteorological observer.
Residence
- Enschede 
- Amsterdam 
Occupation
- Instrument maker 
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
- Koninklijk Instituut, eerste klasse
Correspondent, living in the Netherlands 19-10-1809
Provenance
- Swinden, J.H. van, ‘Lambertus Nieuwenhuis’, Algemene Vergadering Instituut 1811, p. 18-19.tituut 1811, p. 18-19 door J.H. van Swinden.
- Rooseboom, M. Bijdrage tot de geschiedenis der instrumentmakerskunst in de noordelijke Nederlanden (Leiden 1950).
Publications
N/AMember Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Took over the instrument company of his parents in law 'P.M. Tamson' in 1914.
Residence
N/AOccupation
- instrument maker , Den Haag
- instrument maker 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Archive Museum Boerhaave
Publications
N/AWiki and VIAF
Wiki Data: N/AVIAF: N/A
Member Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)
Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Scientific instrument maker at the Breestraat in Leiden. Son of Syds Rienks. At his marriage in 1853 in Leiden to Alida Jacoba Hofkes, he was called a "kopergieter".
Residence
- Leiden 1830
Occupation
- scientific instrument maker 1850~ - [..1871], Leiden
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Archive Museum Boerhaave
Publications
N/AWiki and VIAF
Wiki Data: N/AVIAF: N/A