Credit: ©The Royal Society
    Image number: RS.15262

    Testing telescopic lenses

    Date
    17th century
    Creator
    Unknown, Artist
    Object type
    Archive reference number
    Manuscript page number
    p1
    Material
    Dimensions
    height (page): 263mm
    width (page): 205mm
    Subject
    Description
    A scale for Roman palms (1 palm = 22.34 cm) indicating the distances at which a telescopic lens was tested. From an Italian account of Giuseppe Campani's telescopic lenses, tested in a long dark room with 'Venetian torches' by measuring the distance at which certain printed letters could be read. The test text appears to have been a printed text with fonts in gradually diminishing size. Translated into English by Henry Oldenburg at Cl.P/2/8/001.
    Transcription
    Next to the line: Palmo Rom.o d’Architetto diviso in oncie 12
    Transcribed by the Making Visible project
    Object history
    This account is most likely related to the ‘competition’ between telescopes made by Eustachio Divini (1635-1715) and Giuseppi Campani (1610-1685), held in Rome in 1664 at the behest of the Grand Duke Ferdinand II and Prince Leopold. Lorenzo Magalotti (1637-1712), secretary of the Accademia del Cimento in Florence, instructed Paolo Falconieri (1638-1704), a courtier at the Medici court and member of the Accademia, to compare the effectiveness of the telescopes by using two printed sheets with eleven lines of decreasingly small fonts. Sheet ‘A’ contained meaningless words made up of random letters, and the second sheet, ‘B’, contained individual letters without ascenders or descenders, and flattened out to eliminate possible shadow effects created by the grooves made by the type-face. These were to be read with a telescope from a distance, in a darkened room with two lights. Three Campani telescopes and five Divini telescopes were tested in this way in December 1664 in the Panfilio palace on the Piazza Navona. Because Matteo Campani (Giuseppe’s brother) recorded the lengths of the telescopes systematically shorter, and because Divini added a candle to the lighting, the results were not conclusive. (See Maria Luisa Righini Bonelli and Albert van Helden, Divini and Campani: A Forgotten Chapter in the History of the Accademia del Cimento (Florence: Olschki, 1981), pp. 3-43, 82 and 84).

    Henry Oldenburg reported on Campani’s telescopes to Robert Boyle in 9 October 1664 (The Correspondence of Henry Oldenburg, ed. by A. Rupert Hall and Marie Boas Hall, 13 vols (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; London: Taylor and Francis, 1965-86), II (1966), 240 (no. 331)). Oldenburg may have acquired an account of this contest either by Magalotti or Falconieri, who visited England in 1668. They were present at the meeting of 27 February 1668, when Francis Smethwick produced some telescopic glasses. For this visit, see W. E. Knowles Middleton, 'Some Italian Visitors to the Early Royal Society ', Notes and Records of the Royal Society, 33 (1979), 157-73.
    Associated place
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