Heinrich Daniel Ruhmkorff was born in Hanover, Germany in 1803. Initially trained as a mechanical engineer in his birthplace under an engineer named Welhausen, Ruhmkorff first moved to Paris in the early 1820's to work for a Physics lecturer but quickly moved to England to take up a position with the Bramah Company. Ruhmkorff had of course patented his first improvements to the induction coil in 1851 so it would seem that the rising popularity with which his invention was met would have been the catalyst for his decision albeit four years after the initial patent application. Despite common naming conventions for this instrument, the development of the induction coil began in the 1830's following Michael Faraday's 1831 investigations into what would ultimately become Faraday's law of induction.
Many prominent scientists developed upon Faraday's work and there are conflicting accounts laying claim to the original inventor. Ruhmkorff's claim related to the attention paid to the winding of the coil with copper wire, and numerous further refinements throughout the 1850's led to the award of the Volta prize in 1858 by Napoleon III. Ruhmkorff died in 1877 and was buried in Paris. It is suggested that he died in a state of near poverty having donated most of his riches to scientific and charitable causes. An extraordinarily early and rare example of an induction coil from the workshop of this famous scientist.
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