-
- About MHS
- History
- Staff
- Staff Vacancies
- Annual Reports
- Broad Sheet
- Sphæra Newsletter Archive
- Sphæra 1, Spring 1995
- A New Research Seminar Based in the Museum
- A Proposed New Graduate Course
- A Special Exhibition: ‘The Measurers’
- An Extraordinary Reunion
- Another Newsletter
- Einstein Blackboard Mouse Mat
- New Opening Hours
- New Technologies
- Saving the Globes
- Six New Postcards
- The Friends of the Museum
- The Quadrans Vetus
- The Virtual Teaching Collection
- Sphæra 2, Autumn 1995
- ‘The Artist and the Moon’: Handlist of the Exhibition
- ‘The Geometry of War’: an Exhibition
- A Double Anniversary for John Russell, R. A.
- Exhibition Update: ‘The Measurers’
- Museum Graduate Course Approved
- New Acquisition: a 17th-century Gunner’s Rule
- New Assistant Keeper
- Saturday Opening
- Sphere No. 2: John Russell’s Selenographia
- The Museum on the Internet
- The Opposite Blackwell’s Academic Booksale
- Sphæra 3, Spring 1996
- ‘Images and Practice’
- ‘Women and Natural History’
- Collection and Comparison Seminar
- Delta Lecture
- Development Plans for the Museum
- European Commission Grant
- Exhibition Update: ‘The Geometry of War’
- Haklyut Society 150th Anniversary
- History of Science at the Maison Francaise
- New Acquisition: 18th-century Steelyard
- Rete: an Electronic Bulletin Board
- Sphere No. 3: Armillary and Orrery by John Rowley
- Sphæra
- The Friends of the Museum
- Sphæra 4, Autumn 1996
- ‘The Noble Dane: Images of Tycho Brahe’
- 5,000 Visitors in August
- Art of Engraving Workshop
- Change of World Wide Web Address
- Development Plans
- Fallout from the Geometry of War
- Gifts to the Museum
- Library on OLIS
- Museum Inventory
- Museum M. Sc.
- Museums Week Competition
- New Acquisition: an English Diptych
- One-day Meeting
- Robert Plot (1640-1696)
- Sphere No. 4: the ‘Bhugola’
- The Countess of Westmorland’s Loadstone
- Sphæra 5, Spring 1997
- ‘The Noble Dane: Images of Tyco Brahe’
- A Special Exhibition
- Alfred Long’s Patent ‘Metabolical Machine’
- Collection and Comparison Seminars
- Development News
- Exhibition at MOMA
- Franco-British Themes in Science and Instrumentation
- Full Registration
- Named Lectures
- Recent Acquisition: A Microscope by Andrew Ross
- Rete Operational
- Sphere No. 5: Crystal Ball
- T. E. Lawrence and his Cameras
- The Clarendon Laboratory Archive
- The Noble Dane: Is it Really Tycho
- Sphæra 6, Autumn 1997
- A Torsion Balance Electrometer by Watkins & Hill
- Attendance Record
- Cameras Exhibition now On-Line
- Delta Lecture
- Epact Exhibition
- Focus 15: Gallery Talks by Students
- La Revue
- M. Sc. Students
- Maurice Dumas and the Making of a Discipline
- Museum Designated
- New Acquisition: Camera Obscura Advertisement
- New Acquisitions: 17th Century Trade Tokens
- Sebastien Leclerc and the British Encyclopaedists
- SIC Bibliography
- Sphere No. 6: Geometrical Solids by George Adams
- The Creweian Oration, 1997
- The Garden, The Ark, The Tower, The Temple
- Website Revamp
- £1.2m Lottery Grant Awarded to the Museum
- Sphæra 7, Spring 1998
- ‘Fire and Art’: Electrical Practice in the 18th Century
- ‘Lines of Faith: Instruments and Religious Practice in Islam’
- A Theodolite and Sundial Attributable to Gaulterus Arsenius
- Delta Lecture: ‘The Ambassadors’
- Exhibition Update
- Flemish Instruments
- Fractals Exhibition
- Loans from the Collection to National Museums
- Museum to Close for Building Work
- Museums Week
- Orlando Furioso
- Research Seminars
- Sphere No. 7: A Planispheric Astrolabe by Regnerus Arsenius?
- The Birkeland Terrella
- Visit by Minister for Culture
- Sphæra 8, Autumn 1998
- A. E. Gunther
- Epact Launched
- Epact Unpacked: The Sundials of Miniato Pitti
- Gift to the Museum: Set of Russian Matchboxes
- Koyre Revisited
- Library Catalogue
- Loan to Grinling Gibbons Exhibition
- Micrometers Attributed to John coventry
- On-Line Register of Scientific Instruments
- One-day Meeting at the Maison Francaise
- Peter Dolland and Jesse Ramsden
- SIC in Oxford in 2000
- Sphere No. 8: Thomas Sutton Panoramic Camera Lens
- Sphæra 9, Spring 1999
- Anaesthetics Collection Acquired
- Archaeological Investigations
- Astrolabe Loans
- Crystal Ball Crystal
- Delta Lecture
- Development Work Now Underway
- Epact Unpacked: The Quadrants of Giovanni Magini
- Friends Organization
- Matches Match
- New Acquisition: ‘La Planchette’
- Recent Acquisitions: Richard Verascope & Taxiphote
- Research Seminars
- Sphere No. 9: an ‘Instrumentum Azimuthale’
- The 1999 Student Exhibition
- The John Thompson Collection
- Sphæra 10, Autumn 1999
- Artist in Residence
- Building Developments
- Epact and Museum Based Research
- Epact Unpacked: the Secret of V.C.
- Henry Sutton Thinking: a Reading of a New Acquisition
- Millennial Loans
- Mouesmat Enters National Collection
- New Acquisition
- Pile Drivers Past and Present
- Real Visits & Virtual Visits
- Recent Acquisition: an Anonymous Medical Manuscript
- Sphere no. 10: a Celestial Globe by John Senex and A. N. Other
- Undergraduate Course
- Vessels from the First University Chemistry Laboratory
- Sphæra 11, Spring 2000
- Archaeological Finds: Floorboard Discoveries
- Archaeological Finds: Human and Animal Bones from the First Museum
- Artist in Residence
- Consultants
- Epact Unpacked: A Self-Orienting Crucifix Dial
- Exhibition Online
- Laboratory Flues
- Lewis Evans and the White City Exhibitions
- Millennium Building
- New Acquisition: Experimental Psychology Instruments
- Ruskin and the Aclands
- Ruskin Daguerrotype
- SIC XIX MM
- Sphere No. 11: Christopher Wren’s Lunar Globe
- Sphæra 1, Spring 1995
- Visit the Museum
- What’s On
- Collections
- Search
- Conservation
- Library and Archives
- Library Catalogue
- History of the Library
- User Information
- Lewis Evans Library
- Incunabula
- Bindings
- Association Copies
- Printed Ephemera
- Auction Catalogues
- James Short, instrument maker, 1769
- John Urings, instrument maker, 1773
- William Ludlam, mathematical practitioner, 1788
- William Russell, amateur astronomer, 1790
- Edward Ellicott, watchmaker, 1791
- Henry Pyefinch, instrument maker, 1791
- Nicholas Meredith, instrument maker, 1793
- John Smeaton, civil engineer, 1793
- ‘A Gentleman’, 1793
- Samuel Dunn, mathematician, 1794
- William Boyse, surgeon, 1794
- ‘Two Scientific and Mechanical Gentlemen’, 1794
- John Field, instrument maker, 1795
- Hurter and Haas, instrument makers, 1795
- Auction Catalogues
- Manuscripts
- Image Ordering Service
- Loans
- Online Exhibits
- Al-Mizan
- Anvilled Stars
- Astrolabes of Africa
- Atmospheres
- Bye Bye Blackboard
- Cameras: the Technology of Photographic Imaging
- Compass and Rule
- Cosmographia
- Drug Trade
- Early Photographs
- Eccentricity
- Elliott Brothers
- Epact
- Fancy Names and Fun Toys
- Choreutoscope
- Fancy Names & Fun Toys: Objects Catalogue
- Filoscope Videos
- Flip Books
- Flipbook Videos
- Kinora Videos
- Kiosk Filoscope Videos
- Kiosk Kinora Videos
- Kiosk Thaumatrope Videos
- Kiosk Zoetrope Videos
- kioskflipbookvideos
- Phenakistiscopes
- Praxinoscope
- Thaumatropes
- Thaumatropes Videos
- Zoetrope
- Zoetrope Videos
- George Graham and Bill Gates
- Heaven on Earth
- Johannes Hevelius
- Lets Get Physical
- Lines of Faith
- Marconi, Wireless World
- Moonscope
- Necessity is the Mother of Invention
- Oxford and the Royal Society: 350th anniversary celebrations
- Parallel Universe
- Revealing the Brain
- The Renaissance in Astronomy
- Science in Islam
- SIS 25
- Small Worlds
- Solomon’s House
- Star Holder
- Steampunk
- Steampunk
- Susan Derges: Natural Magic
- Telescopes Now
- Time & Place: English Country Clocks 1600-1840
- Time Machines
- The Astrolabe, East and West
- The Garden, the Ark, the Tower, the Temple
- The Geometry of War, 1500-1750
- The Measurers
- The Noble Dane: Images of Tycho Brahe
- The Oxford Virtual Science Walk
- The Renaissance in Astronomy
- Animations
- Events
- Panels
- Books, Globes and Instruments in the Exhibition
- 1. Claudius Ptolemy, Almagest (Venice, 1515)
- 10. Astrolabe by Johann Wagner, Nuremberg, 1538
- 11. Astrolabe by Georg Hartmann (wood and paper), Nuremberg, 1542
- 12. Diptych dial by Georg Hartmann, Nuremberg, 1562
- 13. Lower leaf of a diptych dial with city view of Nuremberg, by Johann Gebhart, Nuremberg, c.1550
- 14. Peter Apian, Astronomicum Caesareum (Ingolstadt, 1540)
- 15. Nicolaus Copernicus, De revolutionibus orbium cœlestium (Nuremberg, 1543)
- 16. Georg Joachim Rheticus, Narratio prima (Basel, 1566)
- 17. Terrestrial and celestial globes by Gerard Mercator, 1541, 1551
- 18. Gerard Mercator’s copy of Nicolaus Copernicus, De revolutionibus orbium cœlestium (Nuremberg, 1543)
- 19. Peter Apian and Gemma Frisius, Cosmographia (Antwerp, 1584)
- 2. Johann Stöffler, Elucidatio fabricae ususque astrolabii (Oppenheim, 1513)
- 2. Johann Stöffler, Elucidatio fabricae ususque astrolabii (Oppenheim, 1513)
- 20. Astrolabe (cosmographical mirror) and universal altitude sundial by Gillis Coignet, Antwerp, 1560
- 21. Altitude sundial and horary quadrant by Miniato Pitti, Florence, 1558
- 22. Astronomer’s rings by Gualterus Arsenius, Louvain, 1567
- 23. Astrolabe by Regnerus Arsenius, Louvain, 1565
- 24. Erasmus Reinhold, Prutenicæ tabulæ coelestium motuum (Tubingen, 1551)
- 25. Horary quadrant and altitude sundial by Christian Heiden, German, 1553
- 26. Diptych dial by Christian Heiden, Nuremberg, 1569
- 27. Polyhedral dial by Nicolaus Kratzer, London, c.1525
- 28. Robert Recorde, The Castle of Knowledge (London, 1556)
- 29. Astrolabe by Thomas Gemini, London, 1559
- 3. Paper astrolabe by Peter Jordan, Mainz, 1535
- 30. Tycho Brahe, Astronomiae instauratae mechanica (Nuremberg, 1602)
- 4. Armillary sphere by Carlo Plato, Rome, 1588
- 5. Celestial globe by Johann Schöner, c.1534
- 6. Johann Schöner, Globi stelliferi, sive sphaerae stellarum fixarum usus et explicationes (Nuremberg, 1533)
- 7. Johann Schöner, Tabulae astronomicae (Nuremberg, 1536)
- 8. Johann Schöner, Opera mathematica (Nuremberg, 1561)
- 9. Astrolabe by Georg Hartmann, Nuremberg, 1527
- Acknowledgements
- The Secret Life of the Museum
- Titan: a New World Explored
- Transits of Venus
- Using an Astrolabe to tell the time
- Wireless Wares
- Lot 10: BT ‘Titanic’ Phone Card, c.1995
- Lot 11: Marconi Galvanometer, mid-20th-Century
- Lot 12: Marconi Advertisement from Punch, April 1926
- Lot 13: H.E. Handcock, Wireless at Sea: the First Fifty Years (Chelmsford, 1950)
- Lot 14: Photographic Print of Marconi Broadcasting on NBC
- Lot 1: Cigarette Card, Guglielmo Marconi, 1901
- Lot 2: Tea Card, Guglielmo Marconi, 1975
- Lot 3: Three Marconi Italian Postage Stamps, 1938
- Lot 4: Illustrated Article from The Strand Magazine, 1897
- Lot 5: Phone Card, Guglielmo Marconi, late C20th
- Lot 6: Illustrated Article from The Sketch, March 1901
- Lot 7: A Page from The Graphic, 11 January 1902
- Lot 8: A Page from the The Black and White Illustrated Budget, 11 January 1902
- Lot 9: Multi-View Postcard of Chelmsford, c.1910
- Education
- Adults and Young People
- Families
- test2
- Early Years to KS2
- KS3 to Post-16
- Community Outreach
- Special Projects
- Objects of Invention
- Renaissance Globe Project
- Stop-frame animation
- “The Amazing Things People Did for Medicine and Other Stuff”
- East Oxford Primary School Storytelling Project 2011
- EFL
- Additional Information on Visits
- Co-ordinated visits
- Multimedia
- Join Us
You are here: Home » Online Exhibits » Steampunk » Steampunk Photo Album
Steampunk Photo Album
Photos from the exhibition with views of the gallery space, close-ups of the exhibits themselves, live mannequins and the next generation of artists! Each set of photos provides a slideshow facility and a picture list.
Note that you can navigate through the photos in the picture list by clicking on the left and right sides of the photos and by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.

