German, dated 1854 on an accompanying piece of paper, signed to front of body tube 'GUNDLACH BERLIN No.185', on 'Y' shaped foot with swept support to rear, compass-type joint to the underside of the stage, plano-concave mirror in articulated arm, focusing substage on slide out dovetail, rotating goniometer stage with engraved scale to the edge with sliding slide holders, Watt-type linkage to body tube with a course focusing to the rear of the body tube, fine focus screw to the underside of the stage, accessories include; set of 6 objectives in a leather-covered case, 3 eyepieces, an eyepiece goniometer with Nichol prism and accompanying substage polariser, a substage condenser and a set of stops and other items in a fitted French polished mahogany case, Case measures 34cm wide
Provenance: the microscope belonged Hettie Jacobson (née Goldschmidt) a Jewish chemist who fled the Nazis in 1938 bringing this microscope with her.
Sold for £1,000
Result plus buyers premium
German, dated 1854 on an accompanying piece of paper, signed to front of body tube 'GUNDLACH BERLIN No.185', on 'Y' shaped foot with swept support to rear, compass-type joint to the underside of the stage, plano-concave mirror in articulated arm, focusing substage on slide out dovetail, rotating goniometer stage with engraved scale to the edge with sliding slide holders, Watt-type linkage to body tube with a course focusing to the rear of the body tube, fine focus screw to the underside of the stage, accessories include; set of 6 objectives in a leather-covered case, 3 eyepieces, an eyepiece goniometer with Nichol prism and accompanying substage polariser, a substage condenser and a set of stops and other items in a fitted French polished mahogany case, Case measures 34cm wide
Provenance: the microscope belonged Hettie Jacobson (née Goldschmidt) a Jewish chemist who fled the Nazis in 1938 bringing this microscope with her.