Accession No

0324


Brief Description

ivory diptych dial, German, circa 1617


Origin

Nuremberg (Nürnberg); Germany


Maker


Class

dials


Earliest Date

1617


Latest Date

1617


Inscription Date


Material

ivory; metal (silver); glass; rope (string)


Dimensions

length 93mm; width 62mm; depth 16mm; height when open 70mm


Special Collection

Robert Whipple collection


Provenance

Purchased from Gertrude Hamilton (trading as ’Mercator’), Paris, in 08/1928.


Inscription


Description Notes

Ivory with silver fittings; decorated on the outside and inside of the tablets, picked out in brown, green and red.
Leaf Ia: 32 point wind rose with points numbered from East through South; brass index; wind vane missing. Pierced to show N point of compass and house plumb bob.
Leaf Ib: vertical dial divided VI - XII, I - VI, numbered by I, subdivided to 15 minutes. Silver plumb bob.
Leaf IIa: horizontal dial for 48˚ N, divided 4 - 12, 1 - 8, numbered by 1, subdivided to 15 minutes. Inset silver compass (modern replacement - see accessions register) with 16-point rose; cardinal points marked in Latin; magnetic variation given at approx 12˚W of N. String gnomon.
Leaf IIb: epact table for the years 1617–35. Marked ‘EPACTA IVLIANI ANNO 1617’ and ‘EPACTA GREGORI ANNO 1617’. Lunar volvelle with silver rotatable disc.

fair condition
string broken


References


Events

Description
The Diptych dial is a common form of portable multi-function sundial. Diptych dials were made popular by the instrument makers in Nuremberg during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. They are usually made of ivory with brass fittings, and are often elaborately decorated. The name of the device derives from the Greek diptychos for a pair of folding writing tablets, which the instrument resembles.

Diptych dials consist of two leaves hinged together, with a string ‘gnomon’ stretched between the inner surfaces of the leaves for casting a shadow. To use the device as a sundial the lower leaf must be placed parallel to the horizon and the upper leaf must be at a right angle vertically to it. The gnomon must then be aligned with the meridian of the place where it is being used by using the inbuilt magnetic compass. Time can then be read from the horizontal or vertical dial by the location of the shadow cast by the string gnomon.

In addition to the horizontal and vertical dials, diptych dials normally carry a number of other features, such as equinoctial dials, windroses, tables of latitude for adjusting the string gnomon for different locations, epact tables, lunar volvelles for telling time at night by the moon, and various pin-gnomon dials for telling the time according to Babylonian or Italian hours, or for calculating the position of the Sun in the zodiac.
27/05/2009
Created by: Joshua Nall on 27/05/2009


FM:39772

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