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in the picture alongside. Young mechanics from
Germany like Rudolph Carl Adolph Dolberg (1817-1863) and Adolph Hermann Friedrich Petri (1819-1895) were apprenticed to Ekling. Johann Leopolder, who later ran his own large Telegraph and Telephone Company was also one of his apprentices and later his
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foreman, until he started his own establishment in 1850. In 1860 Ekling sold his premises at 25 ErdbergstraĂźe to his neighbour Rudolf Ditmar who owned a rapidly expanding kerosine lamp factory. He died a gentleman of independent means in the suburb of
LandstraĂźe in Vienna in 1876.
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His reputation as a mechanic is documented in the
Austrian Law Gazette for 1850: "The most recommendable mechanic in Vienna, and as regards more sophisticated optical equipment, the only one to be recommended, is Eckling." Among these instruments, we find the
60:. By 1844 he is referred to as a "university mechanic". An announcement in a paper describes his range of products as follows: " makes all sorts of mathematical and physical instruments and apparatuses, air pumps with glass barrel chambers, travel barometers,
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of the
University of Vienna. He produced artificial magnets on behalf of Baumgartner and one of the first photographic apparatuses in Austria (1839) following instructions by Ettingshausen, who had worked with
47:(then a part of Vienna). At the age of 32 he married Theresia Schwarz, with whom he had five sons and a daughter. In the years to follow, he cooperated closely with mathematics and physics professors
64:, chemical and mineralogical apparatuses". His multiplicator was used for the analysis of mineral waters among other things and praised for its sensitivity. Ekling was granted patents for
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Johann
Michael Ekling was the posthumous son of the army surgeon Joseph Ekling. His mother was Anna Maria Euphrosina Ekling née Spitzbarth. He was born in the suburb of
396:
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A. Adolf Schmid, Wien und seine nächsten
Umgebungen mit besonderer BerĂĽcksichtigung wissenschaftlicher Anstalten und Sammlungen, Vienna 1852, p. 92.
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telegraph, which were taken over by the
Austrian railway. Ekling's last invention was a "Galvanic Induction Machine for Medical Purposes".
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Dates of birth and death of Ekling and his family were ascertained in the online archives of the
Catholic diocese of Vienna. See
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Physico-physiological
Researches on the Dynamics of Magnetism, Electricity, Heat, Light, Chrystallization and Chemism
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52:
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Collection of historical instruments of the
University of Innsbruck with numerous items by Ekling (Part 1)
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48:
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Jürgen Hamel, Über die mechanisch-optischen Werkstätten "Dolberg" und "Dolberg & Petri" in Rostock
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Elektrisches Schreiben in die Ferne: die Telegraphie in Österreich: technische Entwicklung, 1846–1906.
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Instruments and apparatuses made by Ekling are in various physics collections in Austria (Innsbruck,
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Faust. Poligrafisch-illustrirte Zeitschrift fĂĽr Kunst, Wissenschaft, Industrie und Unterhaltung
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Ueber die Thermalwasser zu Gastein und Carlsbad in chemisch-physicalischer Hinsicht
27:) was an Austrian mechanic and inventor of scientific apparatuses and instruments.
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Electromagnetic apparatus built for Baumgartner in 1830 (University of Innsbruck)
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e&i elektrotechnik und informationstechnik, issue 9, 2006, p. 402–408
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357:, vol. 56, issues 1-4, Verein fĂĽr Geschichte der Stadt Wien, 2001, p. 3
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Nobili multiplier (galvanometer with a double needle) by Ekling (1834)
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Ekling built this instrument according to instructions received from
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Die EinfĂĽhrung der Morse-Telegraphie in Deutschland und Ă–sterreich.
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Geschichte der Sternwarte der Benediktiner-Abtei KremsmĂĽnster
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Bohemia: oder Unterhaltungsblätter für gebildete Stände
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Handbuch zur Geschichte der Optik: Das XIX. Jahrhundert
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Verhandlungen der k.k. Gesellschaft der Ă„rzte zu Wien
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Notizen ĂĽber Produktion, Kunst, Fabriken und Gewerbe
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136:For a list of acquisitions see: Linz and
49:Andreas von Baumgartner (German Knowledge)
147:), Germany (Augsburg and Munich), Italy (
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19:(also spelt Eckling) (8 August 1795,
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311:Gesetzblatt fĂĽr das Land Ă–sterreich
68:, cameras and improvements to the
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397:People from the Austrian Empire
343:Die Gross-Industrie Ă–sterreichs
79:Heliostat by Ekling (ca. 1850)
1:
370:, Linz 1864, pp. 304–310
407:Scientific instrument makers
189:http://matricula-online.eu//
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159:Telegraph by Ekling (1855)
213:of 26 January 1833, p. 95
53:Andreas von Ettingshausen
355:Wiener Geschichtsblätter
134:KremsmĂĽnster Observatory
345:, vol. 3, 1898, p. 250.
412:People from Margareten
238:, 1840; no page number
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17:Johann Michael Ekling
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222:Emil-Heinz Schmitz,
366:Sigmund Fellöcker,
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143:, Czech Republic (
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66:induction machines
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284:Adolph Pleischl,
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62:goniometers
381:Categories
297:Insert to
175:References
93:Literature
402:Inventors
86:heliostat
170:(Part 2)
58:Daguerre
155:, OH).
149:Venice
145:Prague
141:Vienna
45:Wieden
25:Vienna
21:Vienna
70:Bain
51:and
39:Life
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119:,
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