Accession No
0610
Brief Description
compendium, by Ulrich Schniep, German, 1581 [attributed]
Origin
Germany; München (Munich)
Maker
Schniep, Ulrich
Class
dials
Earliest Date
1581
Latest Date
1581
Inscription Date
Material
metal (brass, silver, gilt brass); glass
Dimensions
41 x 60 mm
Special Collection
Robert Whipple collection
Provenance
Purchased by Robert Stewart Whipple from Antique Art Galleries, Grafton Street, London, on 31/05/1930.
Inscription
‘15*V*S*81’ [final digit very slight]
Description Notes
Gilt brass and silver compendium with decorated case.
Leaf Ia: ‘Tabula longitudinis diei Et ingressus solis in xi sig: zodiaci’ with calendrical calibrations in successive circles marked ‘*Elevatio poli 49 Grad’ ‘DIES’ ‘SIGNA’ ‘HORA’ ‘MENSES’ ‘DIESMEN’ .
Leaf Ib: compass rose marked ‘ME’ ‘OC’ ‘SEPTE NTRIO’ ‘ORI ENS’ ‘MERIDIES’ ‘OCCIDENS’ and ‘VIATORIUM’; index moving over hour scale divided 1 - 12, 1 - 12, numbered by 1, subdivided to 15 minutes.
Leaf II: gallows support for string gnomon and plumb bob (string missing).
Leaf IIIa: silver hour plate with scale divided 4 - 12, 1 - 8, numbered by 1, subdivided to 30 minutes. Marked ‘polvs 48 GRAD’. Inset compass with 4 cardinal points ‘S’ ‘OR’ ‘M’ ‘OC’ on silvered dial marked for magnetic variation at 10˚ E of North.
good condition
missing string
[NOTE: On 15/04/2015 XRF analysis was conducted on this instrument. Results and analysis are given in the ‘Notes’ field.]
References
Events
Description
An astronomical compendium is an instrument that carries numerous devices for telling the time and performing astronomical calculations. Many compendia were made in the German lands in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. They are often beautifully engraved in gilt brass. Typically such compendia carry a sundial, various lunar and solar volvelles, a compass, tables of latitude, and a perpetual calendar.
Two characteristics are typical of the construction of these instruments: first, they were often made as lavishly as possible; second, they are ingeniously constructed, with as many instruments as possible filling the available space. Each plate of the compendium is known as a 'leaf', and carries a different device. Most of the instruments on a compendium are used to simplify astronomical calculations. Many compendia have volvelles—rotating discs that show the phases of the Moon, the positions of planets, and other such phenomena.
Almost all compendia have at least one form of sundial. These are often adjustable for use in different places, and are accompanied by lists of the latitudes of major cities around the world. Sometimes these lists are obviously functional, including various towns and major ports, but often they are more fanciful, including places such as Babylon, Alexandria, Moscow, Cuba, Constantinople, and Nineveh (an important ancient city in Assyria). Like the gilt decoration and detailed engraving, these were intended to show the wealth and status of the instrument's owner.
Some compendia also carry stereographic projections. These are multi-purpose maps of the heavens, allowing many astronomical calculations to be simplified. Using these, people could determine the time of sunrise and sunset, and the position of the Sun in its annual (apparent) motion through the sky.
19/12/2013
Created by: [Adapted from Boris Jardine’s 2008 Explore article] on 19/12/2013
FM:39803
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