Telescope : 1608 : Netherlands

Inventions
1600 to 1700

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Invention When Where Notes
The Vice 1600 Europe   
Mine Railway 1604 England  by Huntingdon Beaumont
Telescope 1608 Netherlands  by Hans Lippershey
Newspaper 1609 Germany  from Strasbourg (The Relation)
Submarine 1620 England  the James I demonstrated in the River Thames
Slide Rule 1621 England  by William Oughtred
Multiplication Sign 1631 Europe  × for times
Coal Burning Oven 1635 England  by John Sibthorpe
Micrometer 1639 England  for measuring small angles in a telescope
 by William Gascoigne
Barometer 1643 Italy  by Torricelli
Bayonet 1647 France  pike attached to gun by French army
Air Pump 1650 Germany  by Otto von Guericke
Pendulum Clock 1657 Netherlands  by Christian Huygens
Syringe 1659 England  by Christopher Wren
Cheque Book 1660 England  by a London bank
 cheques used in Arabia c8th century
City Bus Service 1662 France  in Paris by Blaise Pascal but short lived
Calculus 1665 England
Germany
 the mathematics of change
 by I Newton and G Leibnitz
Cheddar Cheese 1666 England  in Cheddar Gorge
Alcohol (Champagne) 1670 France  by Dom Pérignon
Minute Hand for Clock 1670 England  by William Clement
Spring Watch 1674 Netherlands  by Christian Huygens
Lead Crystal 1674 England  by George Ravenscroft
Weight Driven Pendulum Clock 1675 England  by William Clement
Universal Joint 1676 England  by Robert Hooke
Pressure Cooker 1679 France  by Denis Papin
Phosphorus Matches 1680 England  by Robert Boyle
Plate Glass 1688 France  
Steam Water Pump 1698 England  used for mining by Thomas Savery


Key Moments

Europe was dominant during this period.

People born during this period include:

Sweden was the first country in Europe to have paper money (in 1601). From 1610, Galileo's use of the telescope revolutionised astronomy. In 1687 Isaac Newton published "Principia", considered to be one of the greatest scientific books of all time, in which he gave gravity a mathematical footing. Between 1632 and 1648 the Taj Mahal was constructed in India by Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan; this is considered by many to be the world's most beautiful building. The Parthenon (one of the most beautiful buildings from ancient Greece, built c450 BC) was left in ruins during a battle between the Ottoman Empire and Venice in 1687.

In 1681 the dodo, a flightless bird on the island of Mauritius, became extinct.

Nine chemical elements were known to the ancients: gold, silver, copper, tin, lead, mercury, iron, carbon and sulphur. A further four were discovered by alchemists during medieval times: arsenic, antimony, bismuth and zinc. In 1669, German chemist Hennig Brand became the first named person to discover a new element: Phosphorus.

The English founded Jamestown (in Virginia) in 1607 (the first English settlement in what was to become the USA) and Boston in 1635. The Dutch founded the city of New Amsterdam (later New York) in 1626 and Cape Town in 1652. The French founded Montreal in 1642. An English company founded Calcutta (India) in 1690.

In 1603 James VI of Scotland became James I of England resulting in two separate countries under a single monarch. Louis XIV (born 1638) reigned for a modern record of 72 years in France.


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KryssTal Related Pages

The major points in humans' understanding of the size and scale of the Universe and our place in it.

The work of Kepler and Newton leading to the laws of gravity.

An introduction to Calculus. An introduction to differentiation - measuring rates of change.