Accession No

1661


Brief Description

universal equinoctial ring dial by Beilby, 1/4 19th C


Origin

Bristol; England


Maker

Beilby


Class

dials


Earliest Date

1800


Latest Date

1825


Inscription Date


Material

metal (brass)


Dimensions

length 151 mm; diameter 125 mm


Special Collection

Fitzwilliam collection


Provenance

On loan from The Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge. Spencer George Percival Bequest, 1923.


Inscription

‘Beilby Bristol’ (obverse of meridian ring)


Description Notes

Meridian ring calibrated for all latitudes, divided 90˚ - 0 - [90˚] (0 marked ‘SN’), numbered by 10˚, subdivided to 1˚. Suspension shackle with brass suspension ring. Reverse carries altitude quadrant divided 0 - 90˚, numbered by 10˚, subdivided to 1˚. Equinoctial ring divided I - XII, I - XII, numbered by I, subdivided to 5 minutes; similarly divided on inner face. Pierced bridge with date scale divided to named (initialled) month, subdivided to 5 days; on reverse a zodiac scale divided to sign and subdivided to 5˚, also a declination scale divided [23˚ 30´] - Æ - [23˚ 30´], subdivided to 1˚ (1st Aries = 20 March). Marked ‘S’ and ‘N’ at either end of bridge. Sliding pinhole gnomon.

Condition: good/fair.


References


Events

Description
The universal equinoctial ring dial was designed by the English mathematician William Oughtred in the first half of the seventeenth century. It could be used at any latitude, so was a popular timekeeper for sailors and other travellers. It was really a much simplified version of the armillary sphere, only keeping the parts which were needed for telling the time.

The universal equinoctial ring dial consists of two rings and a bridging bar inside the inner ring. The outer ring represents a circle passing through the North and South celestial poles. The inner ring is called the ‘equinoctial’ ring because it represents the celestial equator. The bridging bar represents the axis of the world, just as the gnomon on an ordinary horizontal dial does. So the instrument is a very simple model of the heavens.

01/02/2001
Created by: Dr Hester Higton on 01/02/2001


FM:43199

Images (Click to view full size):