ECHOES - stories from four centuries of Groningen university

6. Misunderstood genius

9 min · 4. juni 2025
episode 6. Misunderstood genius cover

Description

In a state-of-the-art laboratory on Westersingel, physicists Herman Haga and Cornelis Wind threw themselves into a completely new field of research from 1895 onwards: X-rays. The mysterious rays that passed through clothes and skin had only just been discovered. The pair struggled for years until they achieved their big breakthrough. But no one believed them. * The laboratory of Herman Haga and Cornelis Wind was located on Westersingel and is better known as “The Castle” on the spot where Noorderpoortcollege is now located. The X-rays Haga took are still in the possession of the University Museum. This episode was written and researched by Jan Waling Huisman of the University Museum Groningen and Christien Boomsma. Sound by Rob van der Wal. Voice by Tom Wilcox. Shownotes Want to read more about Herman Haga? Check out: Berkel, Klaas van, University of the North: four centuries of academic life in Groningen 2. The classical university 1876-1945 (2017) W.A.H. van Wylick, Röntgen and the Netherlands. Röntgen's relations to the Netherlands and the rise of Röntgenology here in the country (Utrecht 1966) Knecht-van Eekelen, A. de, J.F.M. Panhuysen, G. Rosenbusch (ed), Through the human flesh. 100 years of radio diagnostics in the Netherlands 1895-1995 (Rotterdam 1995)

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the ECHOES - stories from four centuries of Groningen university community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

8 episodes

episode 8. The women who saw the fourth dimension artwork

8. The women who saw the fourth dimension

Mathematicians and physicists today think and calculate in much more than three dimensions. String theory - which attempts to unify the workings of all forces in nature, needs as many as eleven, to explain the workings of the smallest particles But in the early nineteenth century, even the fifth dimension was revolutionary. Thinking about what it would look like required a lot of thinking and calculating for Groningen mathematician Hendrik Pieter Schoute. But then he met Alicia Boole Stott. A woman from Britain who, without any formal training, made cardboard models that matched exactly what he had calculated. This episode was written and researched by Christien Boomsma. Voices by Christien Boomsma, Rob van der Wal and Giulia Fabrizi. Sound by Rob van der Wal. Shownotes Want to know more? Check it out: Irene Polo-Blanco. Alicia Boole Stott, a geometer in higher dimension. Historia Mathematica 35 March 2008, pp 123-139

18. juni 20258 min
episode 6. Misunderstood genius artwork

6. Misunderstood genius

In a state-of-the-art laboratory on Westersingel, physicists Herman Haga and Cornelis Wind threw themselves into a completely new field of research from 1895 onwards: X-rays. The mysterious rays that passed through clothes and skin had only just been discovered. The pair struggled for years until they achieved their big breakthrough. But no one believed them. * The laboratory of Herman Haga and Cornelis Wind was located on Westersingel and is better known as “The Castle” on the spot where Noorderpoortcollege is now located. The X-rays Haga took are still in the possession of the University Museum. This episode was written and researched by Jan Waling Huisman of the University Museum Groningen and Christien Boomsma. Sound by Rob van der Wal. Voice by Tom Wilcox. Shownotes Want to read more about Herman Haga? Check out: Berkel, Klaas van, University of the North: four centuries of academic life in Groningen 2. The classical university 1876-1945 (2017) W.A.H. van Wylick, Röntgen and the Netherlands. Röntgen's relations to the Netherlands and the rise of Röntgenology here in the country (Utrecht 1966) Knecht-van Eekelen, A. de, J.F.M. Panhuysen, G. Rosenbusch (ed), Through the human flesh. 100 years of radio diagnostics in the Netherlands 1895-1995 (Rotterdam 1995)

4. juni 20259 min
episode 5. Aletta's Sister artwork

5. Aletta's Sister

Everyone knows Aletta Jacobs. Holland's first official female student in 1871. Holland's first female doctor and a fierce advocate of women's rights. But who knows Charlotte? The second student, but the first female pharmacist? Older than Aletta, but someone who later managed to evade what society expected of her? She deserves them to be more than just 'the sister of...' This episode was written and researched by Inge de Wilde and Christien Boomsma. Sound by Rob van der Wal. Voice by Tom Wilcox and Giulia Fabrizi. Want to read more about Charlotte? Check out: Mineke Bosch, An unwavering belief in justice. Aletta Jacobs 1854-1929 (Amsterdam 2005) Annette Jenowein, 'Willpower, daring and unflinching zeal. Charlotte Jacobs ( 1847-1916), first female pharmacist in the Netherlands and the Dutch East Indies (s.p.2019) Inge de Wilde, New associates in science. Female students and lecturers at the University of Groningen 1871-1919 (Assen 1998) Inge de Wilde, 'From the rocking chairs. Charlotte Jacobs and her circle in Batavia', in: E. Captain, M. Hellevoort and M. van der Klein (ed.), Familiar and strange. Encounters between the Netherlands, the East Indies and Indonesia (Hilversum 2000) 187-194.

28. maj 20258 min
episode 4. A rebel field preacher artwork

4. A rebel field preacher

Three Scottish students arrived at Groningen's academy in 1683. The three members of a strict conservative movement were persecuted in their homeland. They shared a dream: to become ministers so they could preach and baptise in Scotland. That dream became a reality for one of the three: Scotland's James Renwick was confirmed, despite loud protests from his opponents. You can still visit the spot in Groningen's Martini church, where Renwick was confirmed. Check the Martini church website for guided tours. This episode was written and researched by Klaas van Berkel and Christien Boomsma. Sound by Rob van der Wal. Voice by Tom Wilcox. Shownotes Did the confirmation of James Renwick really take place in the consistory room? Historian Klaas van Berkel thinks so, but Jan Visser, connoisseur of the Martinikerk, has doubts. After all, the consistory room is not very large and there were easily twenty people present at the ceremony. The space next to the consistory room, the old library, seems more suitable. It is much larger and since all books were removed after the Reformation, there was also plenty of room. More information on guided tours of Groningen's Martinikerk, can be found here [https://martinikerk.nl/bezoek/]. * In Groningen's UB, you can find ebook versions of many of James Renwick's sermons. Several biographies have been written about him. Those works mostly date from the nineteenth century and were written by admirers and followers. Not neutral, but interesting. See, for example: Thomas Houston, The Life of James Renwick, A Historical Sketch Of His Life, Labours And Martyrdom And A Vindication Of His Character And Testimony (1865). Life and Letters of James Renwick. Including the biography of Renwick by John Howie (Middelburg, 2007)

21. maj 20259 min