Jabez Hogg - The Microscope - 1911





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Jabez Hogg’s The Microscope, a revised 1911 edition in English, is a hardback, 704-page work published by George Routledge & Sons in London with illustrated plates.
Description from the seller
Jabez HOGG (1817-1899).
The Microscope, its History, Construction, and Application.
Being a familiar introduction to the use of the instrument, and the study of microscopical science.
Fifteenth edition,, re-constructed, re-written, revised and enlarged throughout.
London and New York: George Routledge & Sons, 1911.
Large octavo, 21.5cm. Pp. xxiv,704, numerous figures on 20 plates (partly in colour), hundreds of figures in 415 illustrations in text, index. Hardbound, original red cloth with gilt lettering to backstrip. Slight trace of use to binding, contents fine.
Final edition of this long-time classic handbook of microscopy of which the first edition appeared in 1854 comprising 513 pages only. The author was a vice-president of the Medical Society of London, and was elected a fellow of the Linnean in 1866. He served as honorary secretary of the Royal Microscopical Society from 1867 to 1872, and he was first president of the Medical Microscopical Society. He was a also prominent freemason.
Jabez HOGG (1817-1899).
The Microscope, its History, Construction, and Application.
Being a familiar introduction to the use of the instrument, and the study of microscopical science.
Fifteenth edition,, re-constructed, re-written, revised and enlarged throughout.
London and New York: George Routledge & Sons, 1911.
Large octavo, 21.5cm. Pp. xxiv,704, numerous figures on 20 plates (partly in colour), hundreds of figures in 415 illustrations in text, index. Hardbound, original red cloth with gilt lettering to backstrip. Slight trace of use to binding, contents fine.
Final edition of this long-time classic handbook of microscopy of which the first edition appeared in 1854 comprising 513 pages only. The author was a vice-president of the Medical Society of London, and was elected a fellow of the Linnean in 1866. He served as honorary secretary of the Royal Microscopical Society from 1867 to 1872, and he was first president of the Medical Microscopical Society. He was a also prominent freemason.

