Toynbee Ear Speculum — Original Cylindrical Pattern
Joseph Toynbee, surgeon-aurist at St Mary’s Hospital London and founder of English-language otology with his 1860 “The Diseases of the Ear”, designed the cylindrical ear speculum that defined ear examination for two generations before Hartmann’s 1880 conical pattern displaced it. The Toynbee cylinder offered the first systematic approach to ear examination — straight-sided so the operator could see the canal walls and the membrane in a single field of view — and shaped the modern specialty of otology.
Toynbee’s contribution to otology
Toynbee was the first physician in the English-speaking world to confine his practice exclusively to ear disease; his careful clinico-pathological correlations (he dissected thousands of temporal bones from patients whose hearing he had documented in life) produced the first systematic understanding of middle-ear disease. The Toynbee speculum is the historical artefact of that work; his name also lives in the “Toynbee manoeuvre” of swallowing with closed nostrils to ventilate the middle ear.
Modern survival
The cylindrical Toynbee pattern survives in some teaching kits as a comparison piece — letting trainees feel the difference between the historical cylinder and the modern Hartmann conical and Boucheron fluted designs.





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