On Jul 28, 2007, at 17:52, bevw wrote:

An ell is about 45 inches. Does that help?
It is an English measure. Perhaps there is a French measure which the wooden
piece would represent.


On 7/28/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Assuming it has anything to do with lace at all, could it be the measuring
device for an "ell" of lace, which was the increment in which lace was
sold.

Some of the old measuring devices/terminology are thought-provoking. Take, for example, a "foot"... When did it become 12 inches (ca 20cm)? My foot is nowhere near that, though my husband's closer. In pre WWI Poland, all textiles used to be sold by "an elbow" (lokiec) -- a measure which was based on the length of an arm between the elbow and the wrist. I never even knew how much that was but (have only met the term in books), checking on the Polish version of Wikipedia, I found that it varied -- from century to century and from region to region. The shortest (and most common <g>) was 50.6cm (just short of 20 inches) and the longest was 77.9cm (30.5 inches).

So, I expect, the French would have had some such measure too, before the French Revolution (which brought us the metric system and the lovely decimals).
--
Tamara P Duvall                            http://t-n-lace.net/
Lexington, Virginia, USA     (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland)

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