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Chapter 9
HOLLAND
Holland, bordering on the
North Sea and surrounded by powerful neighbors, has had a
stormy history. Despite this the country has emerged today a
small, independent and very prosperous nation. Over the
centuries a high culture has evolved, particularly in art.
From our point of view, and of the utmost importance, was
their development of the magnifying lens and subsequently
the microscope. The importance of the latter to modern
biology and medicine can certainly not be overrated. The
capital is The Hague (Den Haag), but Amsterdam is by far the
largest, and in many ways the most important city.
LEIDEN
Location - 15 kilometers northeast of The Hague and 35
kilometers southwest of Amsterdam.
Train - From the Hague or Amsterdam direct.
Road - Take the E10 from The Hague or Amsterdam and exit at
Leiden.
Leiden is on what is referred to as the Old Rhine, and is
connected by canals to Holland’s two chief ports, Rotterdam
and Amsterdam. It is an ancient town, criss-crossed with
canals, and its industries are mainly weaving and bulb
growing. As well as these industries it is an academic town
containing the oldest and most important university in
Holland. The University of Leiden was founded in 1575 as a
reward to the inhabitants for their courageous defense
against the Spaniards in 1574. It quickly established an
international reputation, which it has maintained ever
since.
Museum Boerhaave
(The National Museum for the History of Science)
University of Leiden
Steenstraat 1a
Leiden
Opening hours:
Monday - Saturday, 10.00 - 16.00
Sundays, 13.00 - 15.00
The times may however, vary with the seasons.
Small charge for admission.
This museum is near the railway station, and is part of the
university. It is one of the top medical museums in the
world. It is particularly famous for its collection of
microscopes, and most of all for the fact that one can see
here some of the original microscopes of Antoni van
Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723). It is natural that he is somewhat
of a Dutch hero.
Antoni van Leeuwenhoek was born in Delft into a middle class
artisan family. He had an average education for the time,
and in 1654 at the age of 22 set up as a shopkeeper. In the
same year he married Barbara de May, the daughter of an
English cloth merchant. In 1660, at the age of 28, he gave
up shopkeeping and entered the civil service. In one
capacity or another he remained in this for the rest of his
life. In 1666 his wife died, but five years later he was
married again to Cornelia Swalmius, whom he outlived by 29
years.
Until Leeuwenhoek was nearly
40 we have no knowledge that he did anything which could be
described as scientific. However, at that time he started,
quite independently on his own, to grind simple lenses and
construct these in the form of what we now call microscopes.
He ground over 500 lenses during the rest of his life, and
the magnifying power of these was truly remarkable. One of
his lenses survives which has a magnifying power of 270!
Having accomplished this remarkable feat, he set out to
explore, in an amateur’s way, a whole new vista of biology
which was opened up to him. In particular, he discovered
what we now call microorganisms and understood their nature.
He clearly saw and described a whole range of these,
including bacteria, protozoa, rotifers and many more. Of
equal importance, he was probably the first person to ever
see sperm, and over a period of 40 years he accurately
described these in arthropods, mollusks, fishes, amphibians,
birds and mammals. He certainly knew they had a reproductive
function, though it is questionable whether he understood
the true nature of the fertilization of an egg by a sperm.
Having seen all this, it is a pity, though perhaps
inevitable for his time, that he had no concept of a cell.
Leeuwenhoek had no scientific
training, never attended a university and had little idea of
how to make his discoveries known. However, in 1676 he
communicated some of his findings in a letter to the
President of the Royal Society of London (see under London).
In subsequent years he wrote over 100 letters to the Royal
Society, and it is a great tribute to that body that they
published these letters so that his observations and
theories gradually became known. In his later years the
importance of his work became widely recognized, and he was
internationally honored. However, this in no way altered the
nature of his simple and industrious life in Delft, where he
died in 1723 at the age of 91.
Leeuwenhoek’s biological
contributions were great, but his microscopes were perhaps
even greater. He would have been happy to know that over two
centuries later, during World War II, and while under Nazi
occupation, his native countrymen made the next major
advance in microscopy by developing the “Phase-contrast”
microscope.
The displays at the Museum Boerhaave are extensive and
include astronomy, medicine, biology and microscopy. The
medical displays illustrate the development of such things
as kidney machines, electrocardiograms, pharmacology,
ophthalmology, dentistry, treatments of many kinds and
various instrumentations. All in all remarkable, and
beautifully prepared exhibits.
The microscope collections
are extensive. The “pièce de résistance” is a case
containing two microscopes made and used by Antoni van
Leeuwenhoek himself, one in brass with a magnification of
125, and one in silver with a magnification of 80. There is
also an exact copy of one of Leeuwenhoek’s microscopes with
a magnification of 70. It is focused on the wing of a fly,
and the visitor is permitted to look through this and see
what Leeuwenhoek himself actually saw which was a great
deal! Then there are displays of lens grinders, reading
glasses going back to the 15th century, hand drawn
illustrations of plants and animals done by early
microscopists and the progression of these into the 19th and
20th centuries. There are also displays showing the complete
progression of the microscope in the 18th, 19th and 20th
centuries, with examples from the major manufacturers of
different countries. Finally there is a large historical
library with some priceless holdings going back as far as
1484.
We have certainly seen no finer biological and medical
museum in any country, and with the help of its
enthusiastic, knowledgeable and cooperative staff it is a
pleasure to visit.
The Botanical Garden of the University of Leiden
Rapenburg 13
Leiden
Opening hours:
Monday - Saturday, 9.00 - 16.00
Sundays, 10.00 - 16.00
The times may however, vary with the seasons.
Small charge for admission.
This botanical garden was founded in 1587, which makes it
one of the oldest in Europe, and it has played a large role
in the development of medicine and horticulture in Holland.
In concluding this very short account of historical biology
and medicine in Holland, we must point out that there are
other places of interest which we have not yet been able to
visit. However, some are mentioned in local guides, and we
hope they will appear in later editions of this book.
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