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Teylers Museum was founded in 1784 and soon thereafter became one of the most important centres of Dutch science. The Museum's first director, Martinus van Marum, famously had the world's largest electrostatic generator built and set up in Haarlem. This subsequently became the most prominent item in the Museum's world-class, publicly accessible, and constantly growing collections. These comprised scientific instruments, mineralogical and palaeontological specimens, prints, drawings, paintings, and coins. Van Marum's successors continued to uphold the institution's prestige and use the…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis eBooks
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Oktober 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781040800591
- Artikelnr.: 75562769
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis eBooks
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Oktober 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781040800591
- Artikelnr.: 75562769
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Teylers Museum III. Museums and Popular Science IV. Structure and Intended
Readership of the Book Chapter II: The Birth of a Musaeum I The Museum's
Pre-History 1. Martinus van Marum and the Beginning of the Age of Museums
2. Martinus van Marum's Formative Years and The Holland Society of Sciences
3. Pieter Teyler van der Hulst 4. The Contents of Pieter Teyler's Last Will
and Testament 5. Contextualising the Will: Mennonite Governors in Haarlem
6. Teyler's Choice of Arts and Sciences II The Establishment of Teylers
Museum 1. A Financial Setback 2. The Teyler Foundation's First Trustees 3.
The Appointment of a Kastelein 4. The Foundation's Buildings 5. The Haarlem
Drawing Academy 6. Teylers Learned Societies 7. Prize Essay Competitions 8.
Pieter Teyler's Prints and Drawings 9. Birth of a Musaeum 10. The Design of
the Oval Room 11. Ideas for the Oval Room 12. Van Marum Is Appointed
Director of Teylers Museum 13. Teylers Museum and the Public 14. Musaeum or
Museum Chapter III: Van Marum - Empiricism and Empire I Van Marum's Work at
Teylers Museum 1. Van der Vinne Resigns 2. Experiments with the Cuthbertson
Electrostatic Generator 3. Van Marum Generates Attention 4. From Physics to
Chemistry 5. A Financial Windfall 6. The Addition of a Laboratory 7. Van
Marum's Acquisition Plans 8. Amateurs and Professionals 9. London and the
Aftermath 10. Van Marum's Practical Appliances 11. Van Marum and the Earth
Sciences 12. French Occupation 13. Cuvier and the Mosasaur 14. Homo Diluvii
Testis, Lying Stones and Ohio 15. A Matter of Faith 16. Aesthetic Value 17.
Van Marum's Dispute with the Trustees II Van Marum's Philosophy of Science
1. Van Marum's Take on Kant 2. A Matter of Belief 3. Relying on Experiments
4. The Practical Turn 5. Van Marum's Lectures During the French Occupation
6. A Summary of Van Marum's Ideals III Open All Hours: Public Accessibility
of Teylers Museum 1780-1840 1. Tourism Emerges 2. Selection of Visitors? 3.
Early Travel Reports of Teylers Museum 4. Teylers Museum as Testimony to
the Histoy of Physics IV The Forgotten Art 1. No Great Connoisseur of
Pictures 2. Christina of Sweden's Collection of Drawings 3. Changing
Definitions of Art 4. Paintings by Contemporary Artists Chapter IV: Van der
Willigen - Precision and the Discipline of Physics I. An Unexpected
Guessing Game (Intro) II. Volkert Simon Maarten van der Willigen (I): Early
Years 2. A New Methodology 3. The Athenaeum in Deventer 4. Amateurs,
Specialists and True Physics III. The Art of Presenting 1. The Rise of
Public Art Exhibitions 2. The First Art Gallery, a Permanent Exhibition? 3.
The More Visitors, the More Exclusive? IV. Changing Defintion of Museums
1. From Scholarly Musaeum to Educational Museum 2. The Great Exhibition,
Albertopolis and the South Kensington Museum 3. The Public Museum in
Support of Public Mores 4. Prince Albert and the History of Art 5. London
to Haarlem V. Jacob Gijsbertus Samuël van Breda at Teylers Museum 1.
Mid-Century Dutch Liberalism 2. Some Critics of Official Dutch Museum
Policy 3. Jacob Gijsbertus Samuël van Breda 4. Van Breda, Logeman, Winkler
5. Different Approaches to Collecting 6. The Rhenish Mineral-Office Krantz
7. Monuments of Science VI. Volkert Simon Maarten van der Willigen (II):
Curator in Haarlem 1. On the Job 2. Van der Willigen's Work in Haarlem 3.
Public Lectures and the Centennial in Philadelphia 4. The Special Loan
Collection at South Kensington 5. Febris Rheumatica Articularis Chapter V:
Lorentz - Function Follows Form and Theory Leads to Experiment I. Themes of
the Chapter II. A New Type of Museum 1. New Government Policy in the 1870s
2. The New Annex to Teylers Museum 3. Guards at Teylers Museum 4. Teylers
New Annex and the Rijksmuseum III. T.C. Winkler and E. van der Ven 1.
Tiberius Cornelis Winkler 2. Elisa van der Ven IV. Function Follows Form 1.
Moving House 2. Function Follows Form 3. The Birth of a Museum of the
History of Science 4. Science Museums and Museums of the History of Science
V Lorentz: A Theoretician as Curator 1.A Revered Theoretical Physicist 2.
Much to Offer 3. Refurbishment of the Laboratory and Subsequent Research
4."The Isolation of Haarlem" 5.The Museum Next Door 6 Conclusion I Summary
333II Museum or Museum? 335III The Changing Status of the Scientific
Instrument Collection, Appendix, Acknowledgements, Archives, Bibliography,
Index.
Teylers Museum III. Museums and Popular Science IV. Structure and Intended
Readership of the Book Chapter II: The Birth of a Musaeum I The Museum's
Pre-History 1. Martinus van Marum and the Beginning of the Age of Museums
2. Martinus van Marum's Formative Years and The Holland Society of Sciences
3. Pieter Teyler van der Hulst 4. The Contents of Pieter Teyler's Last Will
and Testament 5. Contextualising the Will: Mennonite Governors in Haarlem
6. Teyler's Choice of Arts and Sciences II The Establishment of Teylers
Museum 1. A Financial Setback 2. The Teyler Foundation's First Trustees 3.
The Appointment of a Kastelein 4. The Foundation's Buildings 5. The Haarlem
Drawing Academy 6. Teylers Learned Societies 7. Prize Essay Competitions 8.
Pieter Teyler's Prints and Drawings 9. Birth of a Musaeum 10. The Design of
the Oval Room 11. Ideas for the Oval Room 12. Van Marum Is Appointed
Director of Teylers Museum 13. Teylers Museum and the Public 14. Musaeum or
Museum Chapter III: Van Marum - Empiricism and Empire I Van Marum's Work at
Teylers Museum 1. Van der Vinne Resigns 2. Experiments with the Cuthbertson
Electrostatic Generator 3. Van Marum Generates Attention 4. From Physics to
Chemistry 5. A Financial Windfall 6. The Addition of a Laboratory 7. Van
Marum's Acquisition Plans 8. Amateurs and Professionals 9. London and the
Aftermath 10. Van Marum's Practical Appliances 11. Van Marum and the Earth
Sciences 12. French Occupation 13. Cuvier and the Mosasaur 14. Homo Diluvii
Testis, Lying Stones and Ohio 15. A Matter of Faith 16. Aesthetic Value 17.
Van Marum's Dispute with the Trustees II Van Marum's Philosophy of Science
1. Van Marum's Take on Kant 2. A Matter of Belief 3. Relying on Experiments
4. The Practical Turn 5. Van Marum's Lectures During the French Occupation
6. A Summary of Van Marum's Ideals III Open All Hours: Public Accessibility
of Teylers Museum 1780-1840 1. Tourism Emerges 2. Selection of Visitors? 3.
Early Travel Reports of Teylers Museum 4. Teylers Museum as Testimony to
the Histoy of Physics IV The Forgotten Art 1. No Great Connoisseur of
Pictures 2. Christina of Sweden's Collection of Drawings 3. Changing
Definitions of Art 4. Paintings by Contemporary Artists Chapter IV: Van der
Willigen - Precision and the Discipline of Physics I. An Unexpected
Guessing Game (Intro) II. Volkert Simon Maarten van der Willigen (I): Early
Years 2. A New Methodology 3. The Athenaeum in Deventer 4. Amateurs,
Specialists and True Physics III. The Art of Presenting 1. The Rise of
Public Art Exhibitions 2. The First Art Gallery, a Permanent Exhibition? 3.
The More Visitors, the More Exclusive? IV. Changing Defintion of Museums
1. From Scholarly Musaeum to Educational Museum 2. The Great Exhibition,
Albertopolis and the South Kensington Museum 3. The Public Museum in
Support of Public Mores 4. Prince Albert and the History of Art 5. London
to Haarlem V. Jacob Gijsbertus Samuël van Breda at Teylers Museum 1.
Mid-Century Dutch Liberalism 2. Some Critics of Official Dutch Museum
Policy 3. Jacob Gijsbertus Samuël van Breda 4. Van Breda, Logeman, Winkler
5. Different Approaches to Collecting 6. The Rhenish Mineral-Office Krantz
7. Monuments of Science VI. Volkert Simon Maarten van der Willigen (II):
Curator in Haarlem 1. On the Job 2. Van der Willigen's Work in Haarlem 3.
Public Lectures and the Centennial in Philadelphia 4. The Special Loan
Collection at South Kensington 5. Febris Rheumatica Articularis Chapter V:
Lorentz - Function Follows Form and Theory Leads to Experiment I. Themes of
the Chapter II. A New Type of Museum 1. New Government Policy in the 1870s
2. The New Annex to Teylers Museum 3. Guards at Teylers Museum 4. Teylers
New Annex and the Rijksmuseum III. T.C. Winkler and E. van der Ven 1.
Tiberius Cornelis Winkler 2. Elisa van der Ven IV. Function Follows Form 1.
Moving House 2. Function Follows Form 3. The Birth of a Museum of the
History of Science 4. Science Museums and Museums of the History of Science
V Lorentz: A Theoretician as Curator 1.A Revered Theoretical Physicist 2.
Much to Offer 3. Refurbishment of the Laboratory and Subsequent Research
4."The Isolation of Haarlem" 5.The Museum Next Door 6 Conclusion I Summary
333II Museum or Museum? 335III The Changing Status of the Scientific
Instrument Collection, Appendix, Acknowledgements, Archives, Bibliography,
Index.







