
Step into a meticulously reconstructed study that traces the rise of hoisting machines from medieval winches to the massive steam‑driven lifts of the industrial age. Written at the turn of the twentieth century, the author treats the engineer like a navigator, constantly scanning the horizon of progress and recording each breakthrough. The text blends technical description with cultural commentary, showing how each new crane reshaped commerce, architecture, and everyday life. Readers also discover the early effort to honor engineering achievements through a dedicated museum in Munich.
The author draws on a wide range of earlier works—be it Beck’s history of iron, Eyth’s treatises on living forces, or Matschoß’s account of the steam engine—to assemble a richly illustrated narrative. Though the study admits unfinished sections and occasional measurement quirks, its careful transcription preserves original language, typographic quirks and even split illustrations for modern listeners. This combination of scholarly rigor and accessible storytelling offers a vivid snapshot of how lifting technology helped propel modern society.
Full title
Die Technik der Lastenförderung einst und jetzt Eine Studie über die Entwicklung der Hebemaschinen und ihren Einfluß auf Wirtschaftsleben und Kulturgeschichte
Language
de
Duration
~6 hours (362K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Peter Becker, Reiner Ruf, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2018-08-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1865–1951
A German engineer and professor, he wrote with unusual warmth about the history of machinery and the people behind it. His best-known work traces how lifting technology shaped work, industry, and everyday life.
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by International Correspondence Schools