
4. “La collection, c ’est moi” (and maybe Logeman and Winkler)...................................209
5. Confronted with New Ideas.............................................................................................211
6. The Rhenish Mineral-Office Krantz...............................................................................216
7. “Monuments of Science” .................................................................................................218
V. Volkert Simon Maarten van der Willigen (II): Curator in Haarlem.............................220
1. On the Job.........................................................................................................................220
2. Van der Willigen’s Work in Haarlem.............................................................................221
3. Public Lectures & the Centennial in Philadelphia.........................................................225
4. The Special Loan Collection at South Kensington........................................................227
5. Febris Rheumatica Articularis.........................................................................................230
Chapter V: Lorentz - Function Follows Form and Theory Leads to Experiment 232
I Dire Straits (Intro).................................................................................................................232
II. A New Type of Museum..................................................................................................... 235
1. New Government Policy in the 1870s............................................................................235
2. The New Annex to Teylers Museum..............................................................................238
3. Awe my Guard..................................................................................................................243
4. What a Coincidence..........................................................................................................245
III. T.C. Winkler & E. van der Ven.........................................................................................249
1. Tiberius Comelis Winkler................................................................................................249
2. Elisa van der Ven..............................................................................................................253
IV. Function Follows Form..................................................................................................... 257
1. Moving House...................................................................................................................257
2. Function Follows Form.................................................................................................... 260
3. The Birth of a Museum of the History of Science.........................................................261
4. Science Museums and Museums of the History of Science......................................... 264
V. Lorentz: A Theoretician as Curator................................................................................... 269
1. A Revered Theoretical Physicist......................................................................................269
2. Much to Offer...................................................................................................................270
3. Refurbishment of the Laboratory and Subsequent Research........................................ 276
4. “The Isolation of Haarlem”..............................................................................................281
5. The Museum Next Door.................................................................................................. 287
Chapter VI: Conclusions.......................................................................................................... 290
1. Summary............................................................................................................................... 290
2. You Say Musaeum, I Say Museum....................................................................................292
3. The Changing Status of the Scientific Instrument Collection.......................................... 293
4. Teylers Museum: Typically Dutch?...................................................................................295
Appendix 1 .................................................................................................................................. 303
Archives........................................................................................................................................306
Bibliography............................................................................................................................... 308
Nederlandse Samenvatting van “The Masses and the Muses” ..........................................323
Curriculum Vitae 331