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Microscope Museum Collection of antique microscopes and other
scientific instruments |
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Microscope
128 (Ernst
Leitz; simple dissecting microscope; early 20th century)
In 1849, Karl Kellner
founded the Optical Institute in Wetzlar, Germany, which in a few years had
microscopes as the main product. The company hired an engineer named Ernst
Leitz in 1865, who soon became a partner. Leitz took over the company in 1869
and renamed it Optical Institute of Ernst Leitz. Ernst Leitz died in 1920,
and his son Ernst Leitz II became the sole owner of the business. During the
1970s, competition increased from several companies in Japan, especially
Olympus and Nikon, which were producing modern microscope designs of
excellent quality at relatively low prices. Several venerable microscope
companies closed, merged, or were bought out in Europe and the USA. Wild
Heerbrugg bought the majority ownership of the Leitz Wetzlar company in 1974,
but Leitz continued to develop their new lines of compound microscopes. The
last member of the Leitz family retired from the board of directors in 1986.
At the beginning of 1987, Ernst Leitz Wetzlar GmbH and Wild Heerbrugg AG
merged to form the Wild Leitz Group. The Wild Leitz Group was broken into
smaller companies in 1988, and Leica Camera was split off. The merger of Wild
Leitz Holding AG with the Cambridge Instrument Company in 1990 created the
new Leica Holding B.V. group. The Leica name is now used for all microscopes
and other scientific optical instruments. Microscope 128 is a simple dissecting microscope signed
by ‘E Leitz Wetzlar’. The instrument has also a stamp by ‘C. Baker,
244 High Holborn, London’, that were agents for E. Leitz in England, and
can be dated to the early 20th century. This instrument is
labelled as simple dissecting microscope in several Leitz catalogues since
1893 (Figure 1).
Figure
1.
Simple dissecting microscope as pictured in a Leitz catalogue from 1893. References Dissecting Microscope
in Case, by E. Leitz, Wetzlar, c.1920 (https://www.mhs.ox.ac.uk/collections/imu-search-page/record-details/?thumbnails=on&irn=5845&TitInventoryNo=47929), last accessed on
19.09.2020 Ernst
Leitz Wetzlar Microscopes (http://earth2geologists.net/Microscopes/LeitzScopes.htm), last accessed on
19.09.2020 LAST
EDITED: 20.09.2020 |
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