Details
Johann Zahn (1641-1707).
Oculus artificialis teledioptricus sive telescopium. Nuremberg: Johann Christoph Lochner, 1702.
Second edition of Zahns treatise on the microscope and the telescope. The work is particularly valuable for its illustrations of both simple and compound microscopes of the period, including the type of compound instrument used by Robert Hooke. It contains many descriptions and diagrams, illustrations and sketches of both the camera obscura and magic lantern, along with various other lanterns, slides, projection types, peepshow boxes, microscopes, telescopes, reflectors, and lenses. The number of folding/double-page engravings varies among copies; the Burndy copy contains 6, while the Wellcome copy contains 4, as here. Cf. first edition: Garrison and Morton 263: 'includes the first complete history of early microscopes'; NLM/Krivatsy 13208; Norman 2278.

Folio (320 x 192mm). Additional engraved title, title printed title in red and black, 4 folding or double-page engravings, 7 double-page letterpress tables, many full-page and half-page engravings and woodcuts (lacking portrait of the dedicatee sometimes present and 2 double-page plates, minor marginal wormtrack in first several leaves) Contemporary German blindtooled pigskin, sides panelled with rolls, episcopal armorial with ISPN gilt on front cover, title lettered on spine, blue edges, without clasps.
Provenance
unidentified bishop (binding) – Peter and Margarethe Braune.
Special notice
No VAT on hammer price or buyer's premium.
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