Accession No
3695
Brief Description
sextant, by Lenoir, French, early 19th Century
Origin
France; Paris
Maker
Lenoir
Class
navigation
Earliest Date
1800
Latest Date
1800
Inscription Date
Material
metal (brass, silver); glass; wood
Dimensions
box length 224mm; breadth 267mm; height 119mm; radius 150mm
Special Collection
Provenance
Purchased from Anthony Turner, 1988.
Inscription
‘Lenoir a Paris’
‘LENOIR
Ingenieur du Roi pour les Instruments a l’usage des Sciences...’ (trade label on box)
Description Notes
Sextant, by Lenoir, French, early 19th century.
Brass sextant in straightforward design with 3 shades for the index mirror (none for the horizon glass), alternative pinhole and telescopic sights, clamp and tangent screw adjustment. Silver scale divided 0-160 by 5 to 20 minutes and read by vernier to 20 seconds of arc. The reading glass is probably a later addition. Wooden handle. The box has Lenoir’s trade label.
(Spare push-fit eyepiece and screwdriver; 27-1-2000).
Condition: good; complete.
References
Events
Description
Today navigation instruments such as radar, radio and satellites update a ship’s position continuously. During the 17th and 18th centuries manual calculations had to be made using instruments such as the backstaff, octant or sextant.
The term “sextant” refers to an arc of 60°. The sextant is a portable instrument that measures angles between distant objects. It is an instrument that has been used in the fields of astronomy, surveying and navigation. When navigating, the sextant is used to measure latitude to an accuracy of 0.01 of a degree. To use the sextant the navigator moves the index arm until the index mirror appears to line up the sun within the horizon mirror. By reading the angle off the index arm, the angle of the sun (and therefore the ship's latitude) can be calculated.
Much thought was put into the design for the sextant in an attempt to make them as accurate as possible. The first examples of sextants were made of brass and were mostly large and heavy. Over time the frame was designed to be rigid and light. A successful and popular design in the 18th Century was the “double-frame” or “pillar frame” sextant which was patented by Troughton in 1788.
The Search for Longitude
The sextant was also used in an attempt to determine longitude as well as latitude. In the 1750’s Tobias Mayer’s design of a reflecting circle was given to the British Board of Longitude who gave the instrument to Captain John Campbell to test fully at sea. Campbell liked the idea but found the circle too awkward to use. John Bird was ordered by Campbell to design a 60° arc (the sextant), which he thought to be adequate for the longitude measurements required.
FM:43032
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