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  1. Cinematograph or kinematograph is an early term for several types of motion picture film mechanisms. The name was used for movie cameras as well as film projectors, or for complete systems that also provided means to print films (such as the Cinématographe Lumière).

  2. Jun 21, 2023 · Learn how the Lumière Brothers created the Cinematograph in 1895, a device that combined camera, film processing, and projection system. Discover how their invention revolutionized the film industry, film culture, and filmmaking techniques.

  3. Cinematographe, one of the first motion-picture apparatuses, used as both camera and projector. It was invented by Louis and Auguste Lumiere, manufacturers of photographic materials in Lyon, France. The Cinematographe was hand-cranked and lightweight.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Feb 22, 2019 · Learn how Louis and Auguste Lumière created the first camera and projector that could record and show moving images to an audience in 1895. Discover how their invention revolutionized popular culture and influenced the history of cinema.

    • Pedro García Martín
    • 2 min
  5. Oct 3, 2014 · Auguste began the first experiments in the winter of 1894, and by early the following year the brothers had come up with their own device, which they called the Cinématographe. Much smaller and...

    • Sarah Pruitt
  6. Learn how Auguste and Louis Lumière invented the cinematograph, the first device for taking and projecting moving pictures, and launched the first public screening in Paris in 1895. Discover their achievements in film and photography history and their global impact.

  7. Muybridge sequence of a horse galloping. In the 1830s, three different solutions for moving images were invented based on the concept of revolving drums and disks, the stroboscope by Simon von Stampfer in Austria, the phenakistoscope by Joseph Plateau in Belgium, and the zoetrope by William Horner in Britain.