
The 57 sammelbands in the Wenner Collection. Photo credit: Gergana Kostova
In this blog post I would like to present the 57 sammelbands (bound-with volumes) of the Wenner Collection. As you may have heard before, this collection includes rare books, periodicals, offprints, conference proceedings, and patents, which are related to important moments in the history of physical sciences. Many of the papers included in the sammelbands are written by Nobel Prize laureates. The majority of these sammelbands were created (bound together) by the collector David Wenner.
The 57 sammelbands in the Wenner Collection. Photo credit: Gergana Kostova
The term sammelband is borrowed from German, and means a volume comprised of a number of separately printed or manuscript works that are bound together (after their publication) to serve the reader for learning, pleasure or another reason. A sammelband can include a few monographs or several articles from the same journal, or articles from different journals, or even a hundred items from the same genre bound together. The possibilities are many!
The process of cataloging sammelbands had some challenges, related to the different and often high number of papers included in them. Some of them have just 6 papers and notes bound in the same volume, while others have 27 or 30 papers. Therefore, I had to explore many options of how to describe them and include information that will allow you, the researchers, historians of science and students, to discover the papers included in these volumes.
Since these sammelbands are part of one collection, the Wenner Collection, I was looking to find a unifying approach to catalog all of them in a similar way, with all their specifics. For consistency’s sake, I chose to use the Contents field (505 MARC field) to only lists papers or articles that were highlighted by the collector.
Some of the sammelbands didn’t have a title, they simply had the notable paper titles on the front cover. Now, these sammelbands have devised titles that begin with “Collection of…” followed by the topic of the articles and the names of the author(s), for example Collection of papers on isolation of helium by William Ramsay and Norman Lockyer
One of the most notable sammelbands in the Wenner Collection is the one that apparently was created by Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar himself. The devised title of this sammelband is Collection of thirty early offprints of journal articles by Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
Collection of thirty early offprints of journal articles by Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar. Photo credit: Gergana Kostova
This sammelband can be located by the author’s name and the descriptive title above. If you are looking for a paper that was published by Chandrasekhar before 1935, it might be included in this volume. If the article is included in the sammelband, it will appear in the result list in the NBLA library catalog. This volume is inscribed and dated “1935, September 21”, most likely by the author, and dedicated “For the Royal Society”. It was made after Chandrasekhar was elected to a Prize Fellowship at Trinity College
The sammelband is organized in three sections with handwritten titles: Stellar structure, Stellar atmospheres and Distorted Polytropes. There are two papers in the volume that are co-authored, one with Christian Knakkergård Møller, and one with Leon Rosenfeld. The papers included in the sammelband were published in these journals: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Zeitschrift für Astrophysik, Saertryk af Nordisk astronomisk tidsskrift, Nature, and Astronomical Journal of Soviet Union.
It is interesting to note that Chandrasekhar (born in 1910) was only 25 years old when he had so many publications, which he dedicated to the Royal Society in this sammelband. Six of the papers in the sammelband are on defining the Chandrasekhar limit
Another uniquely organized sammelband is the Collection of Albert Einstein papers published in Annalen der Physik, 1901-1922
Collection of Albert Einstein papers published in Annalen der Physik, 1901-1922. Photo credit: Gergana Kostova
The articles included in this sammelband were written during the period of most rapid growth of Einstein’s academic career. Included is one of the most influential papers of Einstein: “Ist die Trägheit eines Körpers von seinem Energieinhalt abhängig?” (“Does the inertia of a body depend upon its energy-content?”) published on November 21,1905. In 1905 Einstein published four papers known as the Annus Mirabilis papers
The papers included in this sammelband were written simultaneously with many changes in Einstein’s career and his appointments in major European universities - University of Bern (1908-1910), Charles-Ferdinand University, Prague (1911), ETH Zürich (1912-1914), Humboldt University, Berlin (1914-1918). The last article included in the sammelband is from 1922, the year when he received his Nobel Prize.
The Curie family is also prominently featured in the Wenner Collection and in the sammelbands in particular. One of the sammelbands is the Collection of Papers on Discovery of Polonium and Radium
Collection of papers on Discovery of Polonium and Radium by Marie and Pierre Curie. Photo credit: Gergana Kostova
Another sammelband with Curie papers contains three serial issues with six papers by Marie and Pierre Curie: Collection of Papers on Characteristics of Alpha and Beta Radiation
Collection of papers on Characteristics of Alpha and Beta Radiation by Marie and Pierre Curie and Collection of papers on identification of Beta Radiation by Henri Becquerel. Photo credit: Gergana Kostova
In addition, there are many other sammelbands on a wide variety of topics. For example, the collection includes sammelbands on the discovery of superconductivity by Heike Kamerlingh Onnes
Four sammelbands from left to right: by Heike Kamerlingh Onnes, by Pierre and Paul-Jacques Curie, by Hans Geiger and Walther Müller, and by Herbert E. Ives and G.R. Stilwell. Photo credit: Gergana Kostova
It was a pleasure to hold in my hands and catalog such science treasures. I am sure you can enjoy exploring these unique volumes that bring light to the important discoveries we use in many different areas of life.
References:
1 Sammelbands at ALA ACRL RBMS BSC Provenance Evidence Terms at https://rbms.info/vocabularies/provenance/tr106.htm.
2 Subramanyan Chandrasekhar Biographical at https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/physics/1983/chandrasekhar/biographical/
3 An Albert Einstein Chronology: https://history.aip.org/exhibits/einstein/chron.htm
4 Annus Mirabilis papers: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annus_Mirabilis_papers
5 Mass-energy equivalence: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass%E2%80%93energy_equivalence
6 Marie Curie and the Science of Radioactivity at https://history.aip.org/exhibits/curie/resbr2.htm
7 The Nobel Prize in Physics 1903 at https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/physics/1903/summary/