The Arsenal of Eighteenth-Century Chemistry : : The Laboratories of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794) / / Marco Beretta and Paolo Brenni.

The substantial collection of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier’s apparatus is not the only surviving collection of eighteenth-century chemical apparatus and instrumentation, but it is without question the most important. The present study provides the first scientific catalogue of Lavoisier’s surviving app...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Nuncius Series ; 10
VerfasserIn:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill,, 2022.
Year of Publication:2022
Language:English
Series:Nuncius Series ; 10.
Physical Description:1 online resource (469 pages)
Notes:The first complete and detailed catalogue of Lavoisier’s collection of instruments preserved at the Musée des Arts et Métiers in Paris. The story of the collection is carefully reconstructed and its instruments (all illustrated) are described in detail.
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Other title:The Laboratories of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794)
Foreword /
Preface /
Abbreviations --
Part 1: Lavoisier’s Laboratory Networks --
(Marco Beretta) --
Introduction --
1 The Chemical Laboratories in Paris (1743–1776) --
1.1 Chemistry Comes to Paris --
1.2 Rouelle’s Laboratory --
1.3 Laboratory Life with Macquer and Baumé --
2 Lavoisier’s Approach to Chemical Instrument Making --
2.1 Lavoisier’s Early Education in Science --
2.2 Chemical Instrument Making in Paris before 1770 --
2.3 Lavoisier and Chemical Instrument Making --
2.4 Parisian Instrument Makers at the Arsenal --
2.5 Second-Hand Instruments --
2.6 The Laboratory Notebooks --
Table of Lavoisier’s Laboratory Notebooks --
3 Lavoisier’s Sites of Experimental Practice: From the Field to the Laboratory (1764–1794) --
3.1 Sites of Experiments --
3.2 The Arsenal --
4 The Cost of Lavoisier’s Laboratory --
4.1 Was Chemistry Cheap or Expensive? --
4.2 The Cost of Lavoisier’s Laboratory --
4.3 The Cost of Labour --
4.4 Deconstructing the Legend --
5 The Chemical Revolution on Stage: Lavoisier’s Collection of Instruments (1789–2020) --
5.1 The Chemical Revolution on Show (1789–1836) --
5.2 Instruments Enter French Politics: The Private and Public Fate of Lavoisier’s Collection (1836–1900) --
5.3 The 1943 Exhibition: Lavoisier vs Nazi Germany --
Appendix 1: Inventory of Lavoisier’s Residence and Laboratory on the Boulevard de la Madeleine (1796) --
Appendix 2: Inventory of Lavoisier’s Laboratory by Nicolas Leblanc (1794) --
Appendix 3: Inventory of Lavoisier’s Precision and Chemical Instruments (1794) --
Appendix 4: Select Inventory of Marie Anne Lavoisier’s Residence in the Rue d’Anjou (1836) --
Appendix 5: Inventory of Lavoisier’s Instruments Acquired by the Conservatoire des arts et métiers in 1864 --
Appendix 6: Biographical Dictionary of Lavoisier’s Instrument Makers and Suppliers of Chemicals --
Part 2: Descriptive Catalogue of the Collection of Lavoisier’s Instruments in the Musée des Arts et Métiers --
(Marco Beretta, Paolo Brenni) --
Introduction to the Catalogue --
Metrology --
Measures of Length --
Measures of Volume --
Measures of Weight --
Astronomy, Surveying, Drawing and Mathematics --
Astronomy --
Surveying Instruments --
Drawing and Geometrical Models --
Experimental Physics --
Hydrostatics and Hydraulics --
Acoustics --
Pneumatics --
Thermology --
Optics --
Magnetism and Electricity --
Meteorology --
Thermometers --
Barometers --
Miscellaneous --
Chemistry --
Furniture --
Heating Apparatus and Common Laboratory Tools --
Models --
Chemical Apparatus --
Chemical Glassware --
Chemicals, Minerals and Various Substances --
Fragments --
General Bibliography --
Index of Inventory Numbers --
Index of Names.
Summary:The substantial collection of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier’s apparatus is not the only surviving collection of eighteenth-century chemical apparatus and instrumentation, but it is without question the most important. The present study provides the first scientific catalogue of Lavoisier’s surviving apparatus. This collection of instruments is remarkable not only for the quality of many of them but, above all, for the number of items that have survived (ca. 600 items). Given such a wealth and variety of instruments, this study also offers the first comprehensive attempt to reconstruct the cultural and social context of Lavoisier’s experimental activities.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9004511210
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Marco Beretta and Paolo Brenni.