Accession No
3413
Brief Description
rule
Origin
Maker
Class
drawing
Earliest Date
Latest Date
Inscription Date
Material
ivory
Dimensions
length 152; breadth 41 mm
Special Collection
Provenance
Donated, 1986.
Inscription
Description Notes
Ivory all-purpose rule. Several different scales, including protractor along outside edge. Scales engraved on both sides.
Condition good; complete.
References
Events
Description
Scale Rule
A straight rule with a scale engraved along the length is the simplest instrument for making linear measurements, and has been used since antiquity. However, scale rules were not commonly used for making scale drawings until around 1550 in Northern Europe. Anthropomorphic dimensions such as the foot were commonly used for the scale.
Scale rules can be straight or folding and often have even scales on one side and diagonal scales on the other, which enable the user to divide any measurement into 100 parts. They were often decorated by the maker, demonstrating artistic as well as mathematical skills (although they became more purely functional from mid 18th century). They were usually made of brass, silver, ivory or boxwood.
FM:42752
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