Ian Grant
Subscriber
There's not really a category that covers this as Tessar lenses are used for all formats.
Did CZJ lose their rights to enforce their Tessar Patent(s) as a result of WWI, and the German defeat ?
I ask this question after a post on the LFP Forum about the date of a Tessar and someone else mistakenly saying the DRP meant it was made during the Third Reich which is quite wrong. In fact only CZJ Tessars made before the end of WWII have the DRP marking, all my later Tessars from 1919 onwards have dropped it including one I used to own from 1933.
Before WWI the Tessar design was licensed to Ross in the UK, B&L in the US, Krauss in Paris etc, who all made them usually including Zeiss in the name. However in WWI the UK Government took over the Carl Zeiss London factory in Mill Hill, putting it under control of Rossm later selling it to them, it was mainly a binocular factory but was also making Tessars, so you find Ross-Zeiss Tessars made under license in Clapham and then Ross (Mill Hill) Tessars made in the former Zeiss factory paying no royalties. You get the Zeiss name dropped from Ross WA Protars as well.
It's similar in the US where before WWI they are Bausch & Lomb-Zeiss Tessar lens and just Bausch & Lomb Tessar after., this is also when Kodak began calling their Tessar lenses Anastigmats.
This seems to be why the Tessar design is so widely copied after WWI. I've never seen anything about why Zeiss no longer controlled their Patent.
Ian
Did CZJ lose their rights to enforce their Tessar Patent(s) as a result of WWI, and the German defeat ?
I ask this question after a post on the LFP Forum about the date of a Tessar and someone else mistakenly saying the DRP meant it was made during the Third Reich which is quite wrong. In fact only CZJ Tessars made before the end of WWII have the DRP marking, all my later Tessars from 1919 onwards have dropped it including one I used to own from 1933.
Before WWI the Tessar design was licensed to Ross in the UK, B&L in the US, Krauss in Paris etc, who all made them usually including Zeiss in the name. However in WWI the UK Government took over the Carl Zeiss London factory in Mill Hill, putting it under control of Rossm later selling it to them, it was mainly a binocular factory but was also making Tessars, so you find Ross-Zeiss Tessars made under license in Clapham and then Ross (Mill Hill) Tessars made in the former Zeiss factory paying no royalties. You get the Zeiss name dropped from Ross WA Protars as well.
It's similar in the US where before WWI they are Bausch & Lomb-Zeiss Tessar lens and just Bausch & Lomb Tessar after., this is also when Kodak began calling their Tessar lenses Anastigmats.
This seems to be why the Tessar design is so widely copied after WWI. I've never seen anything about why Zeiss no longer controlled their Patent.
Ian
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