Accession No

2917


Brief Description

octant, by Troughton and Simms, English, 1830 (c)


Origin

England; London


Maker

Troughton and Simms


Class

navigation


Earliest Date

1830


Latest Date

1830


Inscription Date


Material

wood (ebony); metal (brass); ivory; glass


Dimensions

length 326mm; breadth 265mm; thickness 110mm


Special Collection


Provenance

Purchased from Christie’s, South Kensington, London, England, 09/12/1982.


Inscription

‘Troughton & Simms
LONDON’ (index arm)
‘H. DUREN NEW YORK’ (plate on brace)


Description Notes

Ebony; very incomplete with scale and telescope missing; pinhole sight with dark glass. Brass mounts. Brass index with ivory vernier and clamp; 3 dark glasses; horizon glass missing; index mirror; ivory signature plate.


References


Events

Description
John Hadley, an English seafarer, invented the octant (also called a Hadley quadrant) during the 1730’s. It was used to find latitude by measuring the altitude of the sun, moon or stars.

An octant is an angle of 45°, or an eighth of a circle. The octant was first made with mahogany frames and scales on inlaid boxwood. By the early 19th century ebony (a much more hard wearing wood) had replaced the mahogany to craft the frames which had brass index arms.

The octant is used in a similar way to a sextant. The observer raises the octant until the horizon can be seen through the horizon glass. The index arm and attached index glass are moved until the twice-reflected image of the sun or star can be seen superimposed on the horizon, enabling an angle to be read off.

The octant was inexpensive and became the everyday instrument for measuring latitude, whilst the more expensive sextant was used to find longitude by measuring lunar distances.

Created by: Corrina Bower


FM:43552

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