Ottomar Anschütz
Ottomar Anschütz | |
---|---|
Born |
Lissa, Prussia | 16 May 1846
Died |
20 May 1907 61) Berlin, German Empire | (aged
Nationality | German |
Known for | Photography |
Ottomar Anschütz (16 May 1846 in Lissa – 30 May 1907 in Berlin) was a German inventor, photographer, and chronophotographer.
Biography
He invented 1/1000 of a second shutter, and the electrotachyscope in 1887. The electrotachyscope was a disk of 24 glass diapositives, manually powered, and illuminated by a sparking spiral Geissler tube, used by a single viewer, or projected to a small group.
In 1887 Anschütz developed the Projecting Electrotachyscope, in 1891 a slightly smaller, powered version, the "Electrical Schnellseher" (i.e. quick viewer), was being manufactured by Siemens & Halske in Berlin, used in a public arcade and was displayed at the International Electrotechnical Exhibition in Frankfurt. Nearly 34,000 people paid to see it at the Berlin Exhibition Park in summer 1892 also Strand, London and at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair.
His 1884 albumen photography of storks inspired aviation pioneer Otto Lilienthal's experimental gliders in the late 1880s.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ottomar Anschütz. |
- Ottomar Anschütz at Who's Who of Victorian Cinema
- "Schnellseher" and "Electrotachyscope"
- Collections with photographs taken by Ottomar Anschütz
- photography of storks and moving pictures of the flight of a crane in his "Schnellseher" (quick-viewer)
- Photographs of Lilienthal's flights in 1893/94
- Goerz Photographing Experiments and the first flight of Otto Lilienthal
- "Anschütz, Ottomar". New International Encyclopedia. 1905.