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The history of clocks & watches / Eric Bruton.
LIBRA TS542 .B845 2004 copy 2
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LIBRA - Special TS542 .B845 2004
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- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Bruton, Eric.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Clocks and watches--History.
- Clocks and watches.
- History.
- Genre:
- History.
- Penn Provenance:
- Gotham Book Mart (former owner) (Gotham Book Mart Collection copies 1 & 2)
- Physical Description:
- 223 pages, 1 unnumbered page : illustrations (some color), color map ; 22 cm
- Other Title:
- Clocks & watches
- History of clocks and watches
- Clocks and watches
- Place of Publication:
- [Edison, N.J.] : Chartwell Books, Inc., [2004]
- Summary:
- The measurement of time was one of man's earliest obsessions, and the desire to create ever greater precision in timekeeping has inspired generations in the field of mathematics and science. Equally, each advance has produced accompanying works of great craftsmanship that have cloaked objects of sober function with a mantle of outstanding beauty. Eric Bruton traces the path of this development from the simple shepard's dial made of clay, through the heavy iron Gothic turret clocks, and the rush of horological activity that followed the invention of the pendulum by Christian Huygens in the mid -- seventeenth century, to the perfection of the escapement led to developments that form the basic principles of the complex electronic circuitry of our modern clocks and watches. Accompanying this history are the inspiring stories of the men who revoluntionized principles of timekeeping in their day, such as Sully, Le Roy, Breguet, Tompion, and Harrison.
- During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the need for accurate navigation and mapping was a major concern of statesmen, as well as astronomers and mathematicians, mechanics and sailors. Huge sums of prize money from governments eager to gain control of the seas were offered to the creator of such a device. The problem seemed simple enough - to make a clock or watch go accurately on a tossing merchantman or man-of-war -- but it took a long time and enormous effort until a solution, the marine chronometer, was found. Combining specially commissioned line drawings, magnificent color illustrations, and a text that is both lucid and authoritative, this book offers the reader a wonderful catalogue of man's achievement in the fields of science and art.
- Contents:
- I The Earliest Clocks 11
- II The Advent of Clockwork 31
- III Domestic Clocks 47
- IV European Mechanical Clocks 67
- V The Time at Sea 85
- VI The Development of the Watch 107
- VII Mass Production 139
- VIII The Technological Age 167
- IX Watches for the People 183.
- Notes:
- Original version published: London : Orbis Pub., c1979.
- This adapation originally published: London : Time Warner Books UK, 2002.
- "Adapted from The history of clocks & watches"--T.p. verso.
- "A Time Warner book"--T.p. verso.
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-213) and index.
- Local Notes:
- Gotham Book Mart Collection copies 1 & 2 have dustjackets retained.
- ISBN:
- 0785818553
- 9780785818557
- OCLC:
- 56411812
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