Antique 18th Century Diptych Sundial and Compass by German Beringer

Antique 18th Century Diptych Sundial and Compass a portable wooden boxwood sundial with compass, of German origin, by David Beringer, Nuremberg, dating back to the 1790 circa, in good age related condition, with signs of wear consistent with age and use.
David Beringer (1756 – 1821) was a German scientific instrument maker and craftsman active in Nuremberg and famous for his cubic wooden sundials visible in Metropolitan Museum of Art di New York.
A portable sundial, also known as a travel sundial, is a sundial that cannot be fixed or mounted. Stationary sundials usually measure the hour angle of the sun directly, and must be aligned with the points of the compass. Portable sundials are mostly elevation sundials, with which the elevation angle of the sun is measured and is indicated after evaluation with the as known necessary declination, respectively the year date of the sun as time. As a rule, you also need to know whether it is morning or afternoon, because a certain elevation angle can be measured twice a day.

Size: Height: 1.6 cm
Width: 5,5 cm
Depth: 8.3 cm

Price: € 1.500
Please note: Our price is fully inclusive of shipping, importation taxes & duties

Antique 18th Century Diptych Sundial and Compass by German Beringer
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  • Antique 18th Century Diptych Sundial and Compass by German Beringer
  • Antique 18th Century Diptych Sundial and Compass by German Beringer

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