Accession No
4408
Brief Description
monochord for experiments in acoustics, circa 1870
Origin
London; England
Maker
Class
sound; demonstration; physics
Earliest Date
1870
Latest Date
1870
Inscription Date
Material
wood (at least two types); metal (brass, steel); cloth (baize)
Dimensions
breadth 79mm; length 645mm; height 142mm
Special Collection
Provenance
Purchased from an individual in 06/07/1993.
Inscription
Description Notes
Wooden rectangular hollow box on two feet with a single steel string attached across top on two props and fitted across a brass wheel to guide string. Brass wing-screw at other end to tighten or slacken string.
Condition good; complete.
References
Torben Rees; 'Monochord: an ancient musical and scientific instrument'; Explore Whipple Collections online article; Whipple Museum of the History of Science; University of Cambridge; 2009: https://www.whipplemuseum.cam.ac.uk/explore-whipple-collections/acoustics/monochord
Events
Description
The monochord is an ancient scientific and musical instrument, invented in Greece in c. 500 BC, used for the investigation and demonstration of musical phenomena. This 19th-century example is from the Wheatstone laboratory, King's College London, where it likely would have been used by the University’s first Professor of Experimental Philosophy, Charles Wheatstone, to demonstrate principles of acoustics to students.
The monochord consists of a metal string stretched over a hollow resonating body. Using a movable bridge the string can be divided into two portions whose lengths may be set at any ratio to give various pitches and musical intervals when plucked. According to tradition, the ancient Greek philosopher Pythagoras (fl. 4th century BC) discovered the correspondence between simple ratios of string length and consonant musical intervals. Dividing the string into sections in the ratios 2:1 or 3:2, for example, yields the intervals of a perfect octave and perfect fifth respectively. Pythagoras and his followers believed that the whole universe could be understood in terms of musical harmonies and simple mathematical ratios. Until at least the 17th century astronomers such as Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) believed that the planets moved in such a way as to produce a kind of cosmic harmony. Astronomy and the study of musical harmony thus went hand in hand and music was considered a proper part of science throughout the medieval and into the early modern period.
The monochord was used as a musical teaching tool in the 11th century by Guido of Arezzo (c. 990-1050), the musician who invented the first useful form of musical notation. By laying out the notes of a scale on a monochord, he was able to teach choir boys how to sing chant and also to detect incorrect chanting. A monochord-like instrument called the Tromba Marina was used for practical music making between the 15th and 18th centuries. The monochord was also used for tuning instruments and was still in use in the 19th century for tuning organs. More commonly, the monochord was, and still is, used for demonstration purposes.
Created by: Torben Rees [adapted from ‘Explore’ article]
FM:40172
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