All,

I have enjoyed the discussion about Italian hours.  My first dial was an  
hours to sunset dial on my garage door done in the 1970s.  Mac Oglesby's  
models and dials are inspiring to me.  I had a globe parallel to the earth  
in the 1980s that I liked to view on a sunny day.  I could observe where  
on earth the sun was overhead and where the sun was setting at that very  
moment.  About six years ago I worked on a design that would cast a shadow  
 from a nodus onto a map that would show where on earth the sun was  
directly overhead.  It was an ugly confusing map.  My question is:

Hour and prayer lines are fine.  Is there other information, that uses  
Italian hour calculations (or solar declinations) , that would be of  
interest to a broad audience?  Fred Sawyer created a universal dial of  
modern hours based on a world map.  Is it possible to create a "map" dial  
that would show where the sun is setting at that moment?  What could it  
look like?  Would it require a line shadow casting instead of a point?   
Any thoughts?

Thank you -- Warren Thom


On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 06:33:11 -0400, Gianni Ferrari <gfme...@gmail.com>  
wrote:

> In Ottoman Sundials we find often the Italic hours because these hours  
> give
> the time  to the sunset, when the Muslims  must say the Prayer Maghrib.
>
> These hours are given not from 0 (sunset) to 24 (sunset of the next day),
> but, as Roger has written, in two cycles of 12 hours and  are called  
> Ezanic
> hours.
>
> So at sunset we have the end of the 12th hour of a cycle and the  
> beginning
> of the 1st of the next.
>
> In such a way only at the equinoxes at noon the  Ezanic, Modern (French),
> Babylonian and Temporary hours have all the value 6.
>
> In different days this is not true as you can see in the table attached.
>
>
>
> In Ottoman Sundials  generally we don’t find Babylonian hours, while we  
> have
> often the lines of the Solar Time that give to the Muslims the time to  
> noon,
> that is the time to the Zuhr prayer.
>
> These hours are not numbered as in our clocks or sundials, but,  
> generally,
> with the number of hour to noon (in the morning) or after it (in the
> afternoon). So  : 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, noon, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
>
>
>
> They use “Arabic numbers” or, in oldest sundials, numbers written with
> “letters” ( Abjad method)
>
>
>
> Gianni Ferrari
>
>
>


-- 
Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/

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

Reply via email to