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The origins of the battery date back
as far as 250BC with a device named the Bagdad Battery.
In 1938, a German archaeologist Wilhelm K nig reportedly excavated
a 130 mm long clay jar in Khujut Rabu near Baghdad, Iraq.
The jar contained a copper cylinder, in turn covering and
protecting an iron rod, isolated from the copper by asphalt.
The practical use of the device is uncertain due to the belief
that ancient civilisations did not have electrical power and
therefore would not have a device which operated on electrical
principles. Some researchers believe that it was used to electroplate
metallic items however all these beliefs are not 100% certain
and are still disputed today.

The Bagdad Battery
What is know, is that in 1780, Luigi Galvani
discovered that when two different metals (copper and zinc
for example) were connected together and then both touched
to different parts of a nerve of a frog leg at the same time,
they made the leg contract. He called this animal electricity.
This discovery paved the way for all electrical batteries.
The first ever battery was demonstrated
by Count Alessandro Volta an Italian physicist who in 1800
found from experiments that different metals in contact with
each other created electricity.
He therefore built a stack of alternating
discs of zinc, blotting paper soaked in saltwater, and silver
(or copper, depending on who you believe). When he attached
a wire to the top and bottom discs he measured a voltage and
a current. He found that the pile could be stacked as high
as he liked, and that each additional layer increased the
voltage by a fixed amount, depending on the metals he used.
The current is produced because of a chemical reaction arising
from the different electron-attracting capabilities of the
two metals. This device became known as a 'voltaic pile' (the
French word for 'battery' is 'pile').

An example of Count Alessandro Volta's Voltaic pile
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