Re: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme

2016-10-08 Thread rodwall1...@gmail.com
Hi Ian,
Thanks, never thought about smartwatch applications. Looks like I'll have to 
purchase a smartwatch for me to have a watch with the equation of time. But 
I'll have to wait until someone produces a application with a dial that has the 
EOT.

I notice that one of the android smartwatch application producers will add your 
watch if you tell them what it is. Maybe we should ask them to do one of the 
$30,000 EOT watches. That would be a lot cheaper.

Thanks,

Regards,

Roderick Wall.

- Reply message -
From: "Ian Maddocks" 
To: "Willy Leenders" , "Sundial list" 

Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
Date: Sun, Oct 9, 2016 7:40 AM

hi Willy


As is the answer to so many things these days...  There's an app for that

If you have a smart watch you can create your own watch face as you like it 
with underlying code

For example

https://play.google.com/store/search?q=watchmaker&c=apps&hl=en

shows all the watch-face making apps for android smart watches

I only found one reference to EoT in the G+ forum for the first (WatchMaker) app
(The e-watch was a recreation of a two sided real watch with EoT but they 
didnt' seem to have replicated the second side that had the EoT)
so there's a gap in the market to be plugged!


And in case anyone is interested .  If you want a mechanical watch with EoT 
here's a watch selling site with a search included
http://www.chrono24.co.uk/search/index.htm?query=equation+of+time&dosearch=true&searchexplain=1
But expect to be paying at least one kidney



Ian Maddocks
Chester, UK
53°11'50"N  2°52'41"W
frog.happy.froze




From: sundial  on behalf of Willy Leenders 

Sent: 08 October 2016 18:15
To: rodwall1...@gmail.com
Cc: Kevin Karney; Sundial list
Subject: Re: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme


More interesting is to know whether there exist modern timepieces which 
indicate the solar time.
With the possibilities of electronics and a built-in GPS system it can not be 
so difficult.


Willy Leenders
Hasselt in Flanders (Belgium)

Visit my website about the sundials in the province of Limburg (Flanders) with 
a section 'worth knowing about sundials' (mostly in Dutch): 
http://www.wijzerweb.be



Op 8-okt-2016, om 19:32 heeft 
rodwall1...@gmail.com het volgende geschreven:

Hi all,

This is an interesting website on equation clocks.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equation_clock

Regards,

Roderick Wall.

- Reply message -
From: "Kevin Karney" mailto:kar...@me.com>>
To: "rodwall1...@gmail.com" 
mailto:rodwall1...@gmail.com>>
Cc: "Sundial list" mailto:sundial@uni-koeln.de>>
Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
Date: Sat, Oct 8, 2016 4:28 AM


As explained by Fred Sawyer in a recent lecture to the British Sundial Society, 
if often worked the other way around... people had an equation table and all 
kinds of rules so that they could adjust their clock so that it matched dial 
time for as long as possible.

Dial time was (and still is for some) 'true' time. The acceptance of local mean 
time was a slow process. Likewise the acceptance of national mean time met with 
a great deal of resistance. In Dorchester in 1858, in the UK, a judge in a 
court case found in favour of the plaintiff, since the defendant was not 
present at 10:00 o'clock when the case was scheduled. The court was using GMT. 
The defendant arrived at 10:00 local mean time - a few minutes late. He 
appealed and the appeal judge ruled...
"Ten o’clock is 10 o’clock according to the Time of the Place and the Town 
Council cannot say that it is not, 
but that it is 10 o’clock by Greenwich 
time. Nor can the time be altered by a railway company.… Nor by any person who 
regulates the clock on the Town-Hall."

Unless you lived in a (maritime) city, or had an astronomer on hand, or a local 
rich man who went up to the city and owned a chronometer, there was NO way to 
set a clock without a Sundial. It all changed with the the arrival of the 
telegraph   I have found that this is something that watch and clock 
enthusiasts sometimes forget!

Kevin

Sent from my iPad

> On 7 Oct 2016, at 11:07, rodwall1...@gmail.com 
> mailto:rodwall1...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> In 1730. I think I heard somewhere that. Clock manufacturers also sometimes 
> gave a small window sundial to allow you to set your clock. With a equation 
> of time table. Is that correct?
>
> Roderick Wall..
>
>
> - Reply message -
> From: "Robert Terwilliger" mailto:b...@twigsdigs.com>>
> To: "'Ian Maddocks'" 
> mailto:ian_maddo...@hotmail.com>>, "'Sundial list'" 
> mailto:sundial@uni-koeln.de>>
> Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
> Date: Fri, Oct 7, 2016 1:00 PM
>
> If you had a similar clock in 1730 - located where you didn't have access to
> another accurate clock, a sundial would be the only way you could set it -
> and to do so you would need to know the equation f

Re: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme

2016-10-08 Thread Ian Maddocks
hi Willy


As is the answer to so many things these days...  There's an app for that

If you have a smart watch you can create your own watch face as you like it 
with underlying code

For example

https://play.google.com/store/search?q=watchmaker&c=apps&hl=en

shows all the watch-face making apps for android smart watches

I only found one reference to EoT in the G+ forum for the first (WatchMaker) app
(The e-watch was a recreation of a two sided real watch with EoT but they 
didnt' seem to have replicated the second side that had the EoT)
so there's a gap in the market to be plugged!


And in case anyone is interested .  If you want a mechanical watch with EoT 
here's a watch selling site with a search included
http://www.chrono24.co.uk/search/index.htm?query=equation+of+time&dosearch=true&searchexplain=1
But expect to be paying at least one kidney



Ian Maddocks
Chester, UK
53°11'50"N  2°52'41"W
frog.happy.froze




From: sundial  on behalf of Willy Leenders 

Sent: 08 October 2016 18:15
To: rodwall1...@gmail.com
Cc: Kevin Karney; Sundial list
Subject: Re: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme


More interesting is to know whether there exist modern timepieces which 
indicate the solar time.
With the possibilities of electronics and a built-in GPS system it can not be 
so difficult.


Willy Leenders
Hasselt in Flanders (Belgium)

Visit my website about the sundials in the province of Limburg (Flanders) with 
a section 'worth knowing about sundials' (mostly in Dutch): 
http://www.wijzerweb.be



Op 8-okt-2016, om 19:32 heeft 
rodwall1...@gmail.com het volgende geschreven:

Hi all,

This is an interesting website on equation clocks.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equation_clock

Regards,

Roderick Wall.

- Reply message -
From: "Kevin Karney" mailto:kar...@me.com>>
To: "rodwall1...@gmail.com" 
mailto:rodwall1...@gmail.com>>
Cc: "Sundial list" mailto:sundial@uni-koeln.de>>
Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
Date: Sat, Oct 8, 2016 4:28 AM


As explained by Fred Sawyer in a recent lecture to the British Sundial Society, 
if often worked the other way around... people had an equation table and all 
kinds of rules so that they could adjust their clock so that it matched dial 
time for as long as possible.

Dial time was (and still is for some) 'true' time. The acceptance of local mean 
time was a slow process. Likewise the acceptance of national mean time met with 
a great deal of resistance. In Dorchester in 1858, in the UK, a judge in a 
court case found in favour of the plaintiff, since the defendant was not 
present at 10:00 o'clock when the case was scheduled. The court was using GMT. 
The defendant arrived at 10:00 local mean time - a few minutes late. He 
appealed and the appeal judge ruled...
"Ten o’clock is 10 o’clock according to the Time of the Place and the Town 
Council cannot say that it is not, 
but that it is 10 o’clock by Greenwich 
time. Nor can the time be altered by a railway company.… Nor by any person who 
regulates the clock on the Town-Hall."

Unless you lived in a (maritime) city, or had an astronomer on hand, or a local 
rich man who went up to the city and owned a chronometer, there was NO way to 
set a clock without a Sundial. It all changed with the the arrival of the 
telegraph   I have found that this is something that watch and clock 
enthusiasts sometimes forget!

Kevin

Sent from my iPad

> On 7 Oct 2016, at 11:07, rodwall1...@gmail.com 
> mailto:rodwall1...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> In 1730. I think I heard somewhere that. Clock manufacturers also sometimes 
> gave a small window sundial to allow you to set your clock. With a equation 
> of time table. Is that correct?
>
> Roderick Wall..
>
>
> - Reply message -
> From: "Robert Terwilliger" mailto:b...@twigsdigs.com>>
> To: "'Ian Maddocks'" 
> mailto:ian_maddo...@hotmail.com>>, "'Sundial list'" 
> mailto:sundial@uni-koeln.de>>
> Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
> Date: Fri, Oct 7, 2016 1:00 PM
>
> If you had a similar clock in 1730 - located where you didn't have access to
> another accurate clock, a sundial would be the only way you could set it -
> and to do so you would need to know the equation for the date.
>
>
>
> Bob
>
>
>
>   _
>
> From: sundial [mailto:sundial-boun...@uni-koeln.de] On Behalf Of Ian
> Maddocks
> Sent: Wednesday, October 5, 2016 12:29 PM
> To: Sundial list
> Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
>
>
>
> hi folks
>
>
>
> I was just blundering around the internet when I came across the following
> that may be of interest..
>
>
>
> A long case clock from 1730 London that has an annual dial for displaying
> the date and the equation of time
>
> http://www.raffetyclocks.com/antique-clocks/d/antique-month-equation-and-yea
> r-calendar-longcase-clock-by-john-topping-london/170271
>
> It's a premade disk with EoT table t

Re: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme

2016-10-08 Thread Willy Leenders

More interesting is to know whether there exist modern timepieces which 
indicate the solar time.
With the possibilities of electronics and a built-in GPS system it can not be 
so difficult.


Willy Leenders
Hasselt in Flanders (Belgium)

Visit my website about the sundials in the province of Limburg (Flanders) with 
a section 'worth knowing about sundials' (mostly in Dutch): 
http://www.wijzerweb.be



Op 8-okt-2016, om 19:32 heeft rodwall1...@gmail.com het volgende geschreven:

> Hi all,
> 
> This is an interesting website on equation clocks.
> 
> https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equation_clock
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Roderick Wall.
> 
> - Reply message -
> From: "Kevin Karney" 
> To: "rodwall1...@gmail.com" 
> Cc: "Sundial list" 
> Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
> Date: Sat, Oct 8, 2016 4:28 AM
> 
> As explained by Fred Sawyer in a recent lecture to the British Sundial 
> Society, if often worked the other way around... people had an equation table 
> and all kinds of rules so that they could adjust their clock so that it 
> matched dial time for as long as possible. 
> 
> Dial time was (and still is for some) 'true' time. The acceptance of local 
> mean time was a slow process. Likewise the acceptance of national mean time 
> met with a great deal of resistance. In Dorchester in 1858, in the UK, a 
> judge in a court case found in favour of the plaintiff, since the defendant 
> was not present at 10:00 o'clock when the case was scheduled. The court was 
> using GMT. The defendant arrived at 10:00 local mean time - a few minutes 
> late. He appealed and the appeal judge ruled...
> "Ten o’clock is 10 o’clock according to the Time of the Place and the Town 
> Council cannot say that it is not, 
> but that it is 10 o’clock by Greenwich 
> time. Nor can the time be altered by a railway company.… Nor by any person 
> who regulates the clock on the Town-Hall."
> 
> Unless you lived in a (maritime) city, or had an astronomer on hand, or a 
> local rich man who went up to the city and owned a chronometer, there was NO 
> way to set a clock without a Sundial. It all changed with the the arrival of 
> the telegraph   I have found that this is something that watch and clock 
> enthusiasts sometimes forget!
> 
> Kevin
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
> > On 7 Oct 2016, at 11:07, rodwall1...@gmail.com  
> > wrote:
> > 
> > Hi all,
> > 
> > In 1730. I think I heard somewhere that. Clock manufacturers also sometimes 
> > gave a small window sundial to allow you to set your clock. With a equation 
> > of time table. Is that correct?
> > 
> > Roderick Wall..
> > 
> > 
> > - Reply message -
> > From: "Robert Terwilliger" 
> > To: "'Ian Maddocks'" , "'Sundial list'" 
> > 
> > Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
> > Date: Fri, Oct 7, 2016 1:00 PM
> > 
> > If you had a similar clock in 1730 - located where you didn't have access to
> > another accurate clock, a sundial would be the only way you could set it -
> > and to do so you would need to know the equation for the date. 
> > 
> >  
> > 
> > Bob
> > 
> >  
> > 
> >   _  
> > 
> > From: sundial [mailto:sundial-boun...@uni-koeln.de] On Behalf Of Ian
> > Maddocks
> > Sent: Wednesday, October 5, 2016 12:29 PM
> > To: Sundial list
> > Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
> > 
> >  
> > 
> > hi folks
> > 
> >  
> > 
> > I was just blundering around the internet when I came across the following
> > that may be of interest..
> > 
> >  
> > 
> > A long case clock from 1730 London that has an annual dial for displaying
> > the date and the equation of time
> > 
> > http://www.raffetyclocks.com/antique-clocks/d/antique-month-equation-and-yea
> > r-calendar-longcase-clock-by-john-topping-london/170271
> > 
> > It's a premade disk with EoT table that rotates in a year, not a P&G type
> > kidney cam, but was new clock complication to me
> > 
> >  
> > 
> > greetings from 
> > 
> >  
> > 
> > Ian Maddocks
> > Chester, UK
> > 53°11'50"N  2°52'41"W
> > frog.happy.froze
> > 
> >  
> > 
> >  
> > 
> >  
> > 
> > ---
> > https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial
> > 
> ---
> https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial
> 

---
https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial



Re: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme

2016-10-08 Thread rodwall1...@gmail.com
Hi all,
This is an interesting website on equation clocks.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equation_clock

Regards,

Roderick Wall.

- Reply message -
From: "Kevin Karney" 
To: "rodwall1...@gmail.com" 
Cc: "Sundial list" 
Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
Date: Sat, Oct 8, 2016 4:28 AM

As explained by Fred Sawyer in a recent lecture to the British Sundial Society, 
if often worked the other way around... people had an equation table and all 
kinds of rules so that they could adjust their clock so that it matched dial 
time for as long as possible. 

Dial time was (and still is for some) 'true' time. The acceptance of local mean 
time was a slow process. Likewise the acceptance of national mean time met with 
a great deal of resistance. In Dorchester in 1858, in the UK, a judge in a 
court case found in favour of the plaintiff, since the defendant was not 
present at 10:00 o'clock when the case was scheduled. The court was using GMT. 
The defendant arrived at 10:00 local mean time - a few minutes late. He 
appealed and the appeal judge ruled...
"Ten o’clock is 10 o’clock according to the Time of the Place and the Town 
Council cannot say that it is not, 
but that it is 10 o’clock by Greenwich 
time. Nor can the time be altered by a railway company.… Nor by any person who 
regulates the clock on the Town-Hall."

Unless you lived in a (maritime) city, or had an astronomer on hand, or a local 
rich man who went up to the city and owned a chronometer, there was NO way to 
set a clock without a Sundial. It all changed with the the arrival of the 
telegraph   I have found that this is something that watch and clock 
enthusiasts sometimes forget!

Kevin

Sent from my iPad

> On 7 Oct 2016, at 11:07, rodwall1...@gmail.com  wrote:
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> In 1730. I think I heard somewhere that. Clock manufacturers also sometimes 
> gave a small window sundial to allow you to set your clock. With a equation 
> of time table. Is that correct?
> 
> Roderick Wall..
> 
> 
> - Reply message -
> From: "Robert Terwilliger" 
> To: "'Ian Maddocks'" , "'Sundial list'" 
> 
> Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
> Date: Fri, Oct 7, 2016 1:00 PM
> 
> If you had a similar clock in 1730 - located where you didn't have access to
> another accurate clock, a sundial would be the only way you could set it -
> and to do so you would need to know the equation for the date. 
> 
>  
> 
> Bob
> 
>  
> 
>   _  
> 
> From: sundial [mailto:sundial-boun...@uni-koeln.de] On Behalf Of Ian
> Maddocks
> Sent: Wednesday, October 5, 2016 12:29 PM
> To: Sundial list
> Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
> 
>  
> 
> hi folks
> 
>  
> 
> I was just blundering around the internet when I came across the following
> that may be of interest..
> 
>  
> 
> A long case clock from 1730 London that has an annual dial for displaying
> the date and the equation of time
> 
> http://www.raffetyclocks.com/antique-clocks/d/antique-month-equation-and-yea
> r-calendar-longcase-clock-by-john-topping-london/170271
> 
> It's a premade disk with EoT table that rotates in a year, not a P&G type
> kidney cam, but was new clock complication to me
> 
>  
> 
> greetings from 
> 
>  
> 
> Ian Maddocks
> Chester, UK
> 53°11'50"N  2°52'41"W
> frog.happy.froze
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> ---
> https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial
>---
https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial



Re: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme

2016-10-08 Thread rodwall1...@gmail.com
Hi all,
And thanks to all who commented on clocks that have the equation of time on the 
dial. So many of you had something interesting from court cases, bath clocks, 
watches with equation dials etc. 

I did not know that there were clocks that had equation of time dials. I always 
thought that a equation of time table was use to set the clocks from sundials.

I would love to have a watch or pocket watch or even a clock that has a 
equation of time dial. But not at the $30,000 prices that they are asking.
Is there any reasonably priced modern clocks or watches today that have the 
equation of time dials?

Thanks all for such a interesting subject. So many of you have so much 
interesting knowledge thanks.

Regards,

Roderick Wall.

- Reply message -
From: "Kevin Karney" 
To: "rodwall1...@gmail.com" 
Cc: "Sundial list" 
Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
Date: Sat, Oct 8, 2016 4:28 AM

As explained by Fred Sawyer in a recent lecture to the British Sundial Society, 
if often worked the other way around... people had an equation table and all 
kinds of rules so that they could adjust their clock so that it matched dial 
time for as long as possible. 

Dial time was (and still is for some) 'true' time. The acceptance of local mean 
time was a slow process. Likewise the acceptance of national mean time met with 
a great deal of resistance. In Dorchester in 1858, in the UK, a judge in a 
court case found in favour of the plaintiff, since the defendant was not 
present at 10:00 o'clock when the case was scheduled. The court was using GMT. 
The defendant arrived at 10:00 local mean time - a few minutes late. He 
appealed and the appeal judge ruled...
"Ten o’clock is 10 o’clock according to the Time of the Place and the Town 
Council cannot say that it is not, 
but that it is 10 o’clock by Greenwich 
time. Nor can the time be altered by a railway company.… Nor by any person who 
regulates the clock on the Town-Hall."

Unless you lived in a (maritime) city, or had an astronomer on hand, or a local 
rich man who went up to the city and owned a chronometer, there was NO way to 
set a clock without a Sundial. It all changed with the the arrival of the 
telegraph   I have found that this is something that watch and clock 
enthusiasts sometimes forget!

Kevin

Sent from my iPad

> On 7 Oct 2016, at 11:07, rodwall1...@gmail.com  wrote:
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> In 1730. I think I heard somewhere that. Clock manufacturers also sometimes 
> gave a small window sundial to allow you to set your clock. With a equation 
> of time table. Is that correct?
> 
> Roderick Wall..
> 
> 
> - Reply message -
> From: "Robert Terwilliger" 
> To: "'Ian Maddocks'" , "'Sundial list'" 
> 
> Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
> Date: Fri, Oct 7, 2016 1:00 PM
> 
> If you had a similar clock in 1730 - located where you didn't have access to
> another accurate clock, a sundial would be the only way you could set it -
> and to do so you would need to know the equation for the date. 
> 
>  
> 
> Bob
> 
>  
> 
>   _  
> 
> From: sundial [mailto:sundial-boun...@uni-koeln.de] On Behalf Of Ian
> Maddocks
> Sent: Wednesday, October 5, 2016 12:29 PM
> To: Sundial list
> Subject: Longcase Clock with Equation of TIme
> 
>  
> 
> hi folks
> 
>  
> 
> I was just blundering around the internet when I came across the following
> that may be of interest..
> 
>  
> 
> A long case clock from 1730 London that has an annual dial for displaying
> the date and the equation of time
> 
> http://www.raffetyclocks.com/antique-clocks/d/antique-month-equation-and-yea
> r-calendar-longcase-clock-by-john-topping-london/170271
> 
> It's a premade disk with EoT table that rotates in a year, not a P&G type
> kidney cam, but was new clock complication to me
> 
>  
> 
> greetings from 
> 
>  
> 
> Ian Maddocks
> Chester, UK
> 53°11'50"N  2°52'41"W
> frog.happy.froze
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> ---
> https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial
>---
https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial



new work on European pocket dials in Colonial America

2016-10-08 Thread Schechner, Sara
Dear All,

I am excited to report the recent publication of my essay-really a monograph 
inside a book-concerning sundials used in colonial North and South America:

EUROPEAN POCKET SUNDIALS FOR COLONIAL USE IN AMERICAN TERRITORIES
by Sara J. Schechner, in How Scientific Instruments Have Changed Hands 
(http://www.brill.com/products/book/how-scientific-instruments-have-changed-hands),
 edited by Alison Morrison-Low, Sara J. Schechner, and Paolo Brenni, Scientific 
Instruments and Collections 5 (Leiden: Brill, 2016).   The essay is 55 pages 
and well-illustrated by photographs and maps.

The work discusses the kinds of portable sundials brought to the Americas by 
European explorers and settlers, and how these were adapted for use there.  It 
describes who needed or desired the sundials, where they were produced, and 
what their geographical range was.   The monograph analyzes archaeological 
evidence, household and business inventories, and most importantly, the very 
rare extant pocket sundials strongly linked to remote forts, tribal lands, 
battlefields, slave plantations, and colonial administrative seats.  These 
sundials shed light on the relationship of Time to imperialism and the 
transmission of cartographic and ethnographic knowledge during the colonial 
period.

I hope that you will enjoy reading it!

Sara

Sara J. Schechner
Altazimuth Arts
42°36'N   71° 22'W
West Newton, MA 02465
http://www.altazimutharts.com/

Sara J. Schechner, Ph.D.
David P. Wheatland Curator of the Collection of Historical Scientific 
Instruments
Lecturer on the History of Science
Department of the History of Science, Harvard University
Science Center 251c, 1 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
Tel: 617-496-9542   |   Fax: 617-496-5932
sche...@fas.harvard.edu |@SaraSchechner
http://scholar.harvard.edu/saraschechner
http://chsi.harvard.edu/


---
https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial



Re: DEUTSCHLANDKARTE Sonnenuhren

2016-10-08 Thread Gian Casalegno
An even better idea would be to register all these 13,000 sundials on
Sundial Atlas (actually only 1489 are included) and let them become a
valuable resource for all the sundials enthusiasts in the world !
Ciao.
Gian Casalegno


2016-10-08 13:50 GMT+02:00 Reinhold Kriegler :

>
>
> Dear sundial friends!
>
> The
>
>
> of this week has published a nice idea:
>
> "DEUTSCHLANDKARTE  Sonnenuhren"
>
> A map of Germany, showing the 13-thousand registered sundials by *Deutsche
> Gesellschaft für Chronometrie*.
> The Illustration was composed by Laura Edelbacher, the text is written by
> Friederike Milbradt.
> If you want to get the scanned page, just contact me
> or buy a copy of ZEIT weekly newspaper!
>
>
>
> Greetings from Reinhold Kriegler
>
>
> * ** ***  * ** ***
>
> Reinhold R. Kriegler
> Lat. 51,8390° N. Long. 12,25512° E. GMT +1 (DST +2)  www.ta-dip.de
> http://www.ta-dip.de/dies-und-das/r-e-i-n-h-o-l-d.html
> http://www.ta-dip.de/dies-und-das/das-b-a-u-h-a-u-s-museum-
> in-dessau-rosslau.html
> 
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DEUTSCHLANDKARTE Sonnenuhren

2016-10-08 Thread Reinhold Kriegler
Title:  DEUTSCHLANDKARTE  Sonnenuhren




Dear sundial friends!

The


of this week has published a nice idea:

"DEUTSCHLANDKARTE  Sonnenuhren"

A map of Germany, showing the 13-thousand registered sundials by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Chronometrie.
The Illustration was composed by Laura Edelbacher, the text is written by Friederike Milbradt.
If you want to get the scanned page, just contact me
or buy a copy of ZEIT weekly newspaper! 



Greetings from Reinhold Kriegler




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Reinhold R. Kriegler
Lat. 51,8390° N. Long. 12,25512° E. GMT +1 (DST +2)  www.ta-dip.de
http://www.ta-dip.de/dies-und-das/r-e-i-n-h-o-l-d.html 
http://www.ta-dip.de/dies-und-das/das-b-a-u-h-a-u-s-museum-in-dessau-rosslau.html 
http://www.ta-dip.de/dies-und-das/die-niederpoeringer-radrennbahn.html 
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