Hi Michael and all,

I don't know the dominance of temporal hours or equal hours before mechanical 
or water clocks were in common usage. It is clear they co-existed. It is a 
significant research endeavor to determine the dominance and the reasons. 
Meeting for lunch was no problem. Dinner was more chancy; remember the verse of 
Cattulis, "Cenabis bene, mi Fabulle". Once the time and location were set, the 
important question remained "Who is bringing the duck".

Greek and Roman dials were not horizontal or vertical flat planar dials, but 
hemispheres, scafes or other projections of the sky onto a spherical or conical 
surface.  Planar dials came with the Islamic dials. The first planar dial with 
a polar gnomon was  by Ibn al-Shatir in Damascus in 1371. This dial had  
temporal hours, equal hours based on noon, sunrise and sunset, and Islamic 
prayer times, including reference lines to prayer times when the sun was well 
below the horizon. For me this dial is the epitome of sundials. It includes all 
the time systems in vogue at that time and for hundreds of years before and 
after. They all existed and were in common usage suited for different purposes. 
The question remains "Who is bringing the duck" for dinner. Time is important. 
Don't overcook it. 

Regards, Roger Bailey


 Michael Ossipoff 
Sent: Wednesday, July 29, 2015 11:57 AM
To: Roger Bailey ; sundial list 
Subject: Re: Temporal Hours


Roger, thanks for the answer. Ok, I shouldn't say that as a fact without having 
more information than I do. This is what I was implying or saying, without 
really having much support for it:


"In Europe and the fertile-crescent region, in ancient, classical and medieval 
times, before mechanical clocks (starting with Folliet-balance clocks) came 
into wide use, Equal Hours were of interest, for the most part, only to 
astronomers and astrologers. For ordinary civil timekeeping, for arranging 
meetings, keeping schedules or other civil/social purposes, Temporary Hours 
were preferred by pretty much everyone."



Were a fair percentage of people making their appointments and schedules by 
Equal Hours in the times and places named in the above paragraph?


I'm not being argumentative--I really don't know. 


----------------------------------


Thanks for reminding me about Temporary Hours lines on Flat Dials being 
satisfactorily approximated by straight lines. I'd temporarily (no pun 
intended) forgotten that. It was a question that I'd asked, and received an 
answer to, when I first wrote to NASS.


Were Flat-Dials (for Temporary or Equal Hours) in use before mechanical clocks 
were getting popular?  What about _wide_ use? How early?


-------------------------------------


Can anyone explain why the early, inaccurate inertia-controlled Folliet-Balance 
clocks replaced the cheaper, more easily-made water-clocks? Were those 
earliest, most inaccurate mechanical clocks significantly, or any, more 
accurate than water-clocks?


Michael Ossipoff












On Tue, Jul 28, 2015 at 11:58 PM, Roger Bailey <rtbai...@telus.net> wrote:

   Hi Michael  and all,

  Temporal or Antique hours co-existed with equal hours from way back, 
thousands of years. It didn't take a technological device like a clock to cause 
a change. A more interesting point is the portrayal of temporal hours, 12 
unequal hours in the day on a flat sundial. It is easy on Greek/Roman 
hemispheres but what about flat planar sundials. Is it sufficient to calculate 
the points for the solstices and draw a straight line between them? This works 
but is it right mathematically? To answer this question, Fred Sawyer gave an 
excellent presentation on Antique Hours at the NASS Conference in 2010 in 
Burlington. Was it really five years ago! Here is a clip of the abstract from 
the NASS website.

  "Antique Hour Lines: Fred Sawyer gave another excellent example of his 
reviews of the history of complex mathematical concepts for sundials. In the 
case of Antique Hour Lines, the question was “Are they straight lines?” For 
millennia they were assumed to be, but the assumption was questioned by many 
mathematicians. Proofs were offered by Ibrahim Ibn Sinan in the 10th century, 
Christopher Clavius in the 16th, Hellingweth in the 18th and many including 
Montucla, Delambre and Cadell in the 19th, offering proofs that the lines were 
in fact curved. The various proofs tended to be empirical based on plotting the 
results of individual calculation. Biot offered an analysis in 1841 and Davies 
in 1843, but the problem was not fully solved until 1914 when Hugo Michnik 
studied the curves for the equatorial sundial, providing a method to come up 
with non-parametric equations for the curve for each hour. Fred then presented 
the graphs of various hour lines at different latitudes and inclinations. The 
curves were amazingly complex looking but the specific area of interest, where 
a shadow would be projected was very close to the straight lines of the 
traditional method."

  This is why I belong to NASS, to read the Compendium and to go to the 
conferences. Here we see solutions to problems we didn't even know existed.

  Regards, Roger Bailey


  From: Michael Ossipoff 
  Sent: Tuesday, July 28, 2015 4:47 PM
  To: Dan Uza 
  Cc: sundial list 
  Subject: Re: Precision: the measure of all things




  (I should clarify again that, for clarity, I like to capitalize _kinds_ of 
whatever sort of thing I'm talking about...such as kinds of sundials or 
hour-systems, though I realize that that capitalization is probably not 
officially correct.)


  Another closely-related interesting question is the matter of what _kind_ of 
hours are used. Of course every book or article on sundials points out that, 
before mechanical clocks became widespread, civil time was measured in 
"Temporary Hours", which divided the day, from sunrise to sunset, into 12 equal 
parts, and likewise divided the night, from sunset to sunrise, into 12 equal 
parts.


  Those books and articles nearly always imply or say that equal hours was a 
new invention when it was adopted--that someone invented a new way to designate 
time, and so it was adopted. Another frequent, and related, statement or 
implication is that the Horizontal Dial was an innovation that was came into 
use upon its invention because, before that, its possibility was there, but 
just hadn't occurred to anyone.


  But I read different. I read that Equal Hours were in use by astronomers and 
astrologers long before they were adopted for civil time, and so they were 
hardly a new invention at the time of their adoption for civil time.


  In fact, look at a Hemispherium or Hemicyclium. Designed to read in Temporary 
Hours, its hour-line, for a particular hour, crosses a different Equal-Hours 
line, according to the declination. Whether those Temporary Hours were drawn by 
calculation, or by empirical observation, it's plain that it would have been 
obvious to the dial-maker that he was making the 3 p.m. hour-line cross 
different Equal-Hours lines at different solar declinations.


  One thing that I'm objecting to is that many of those books imply that 
Temporary Hours are more primitive, and Equal Hours are something more advanced 
that therefore, when invented, immediately replaced Temporary Hours.


  Primitive? Rather, a lot more complicated and laborious to make. For 
sundials, and likewise for water-clocks.


  People should be impressed by the ingenuity and determination of early makers 
of sundials and water-clocks, who devised Temporary Hours markings and 
mechanisms for them.


  As for the Horizontal Dial, of course it's for Equal Hours. That's what it's 
convenient for. Sure, Flat Dials, including Horizontal Dials, and Polar Dials, 
and Equatorial Dials, and others, could have likewise been made for Temporary 
Hours, but they wouldn't have been easier to mark than a Hemicyclium. So it 
isn't surprising if the Horizontal Dial came into use around the same time as 
Equal Hours.


  What I read was that, though Equal Hours were well known and used by 
astronomers and astrologers, no one wanted them for civil timekeeping. Hence 
the effort and ingenuity used to devise Temporary Hours sundials and 
water-clocks.


  But, when the mechanical clock was invented, and came into relatively wide 
use (as tower-clocks, and in some homes), it was so much simpler to make clocks 
for Equal Hours, that, as a result, Equal Hours replaced Temporary Hours, for 
that reason of pure manufacturing-practicality.


  (By the way, were the early mechanical clocks, the Folliet Balance 
intertially-slowed  clocks, without the fusee compensation, any more accurate 
than water-clocks, which were much cheaper and easier to build?)


  Temporary Hours surely made a lot of sense in agricultural societies, where 
it must have been very important and practical for farmers to know what 
percentage of the day remained. I don't advocate a return to Temporary Hours, 
because, speaking for myself, it seems to me that finding what percentage of 
the day is over, and how much or how little remains, seems a bit pessimistic, 
and maybe not a good way to name the time of day.   ...but I realize that it 
had practical importance in agricultural societies.


  Michael Ossipoff








  On Mon, Jul 27, 2015 at 5:59 PM, Dan Uza <cerculdest...@gmail.com> wrote:

    Hi everyone,


    If you haven't already, you might want to check out the first part of the 
documentary "Precision: the measure of all things". It's about the measurement 
of time and length, featuring the topic of sundials. There's an interesting 
theory about how the day got split into 12 hours because this number is highly 
divisible (but why not 60?). I just watched it on Da Vinci Learning.  


    Dan Uza
    Romania

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