Accession No
0806
Brief Description
diptych string dial with inset compass, Italian
Origin
Italy?
Maker
Class
dials
Earliest Date
1800
Latest Date
1900
Inscription Date
Material
metal (brass, silver); glass
Dimensions
length 62mm; breadth 30mm; compass diameter 19mm
Special Collection
Robert Whipple collection
Provenance
Purchased by Robert Stewart Whipple from Malcolm Gardner, London, England in 05/1936.
Inscription
Description Notes
Brass diptych dial with folding string support and two brass levelling screws. Plumb bob in form of strip of metal hangs in vertical leaf. Compass set into end away from hinge with lines of cardinal points marked.
String missing.
Only noon line marked on instrument.
Good condition; incomplete (string missing)
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:40279
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