The only known example of the only scientific instrument produced by John Seller
[Sundial].
[London,
c.1640].
200mm (8 inch) diameter double horizontal brass sundial, octagonal form, the corners pierced for screws, engraved plate for solar declination and hours, gnomon underpinned at centre, bearing later signature of John Seller, over-signed in the chapter ring "Jon. Seller excut Londini".
1594
notes:
Elias Allen produced several dials after the design of his friend, William Oughtred. The present example conforms closely to one held in the National Collection at Greenwich (AST0232). Known as "double horizontal" dials because they have two scales for reading the hours using the angled side of the gnomon, and the vertical supporting edge, this second edge shows the lines of solar declination, the ecliptic and the right ascension of the sun. They were useful not only for te...
bibliography:
Higton, H, 'Sundials at Greenwich', OUP/NMM, 2002, p.58-9; Davis & Daniel, 'John Seller: Instrument Maker and Plagiarist', SIS Bulletin No.102, September 2009, p.6-10;
Dawes, H, 'Instruments of the Imagination', Dawes Trust, 2009, p.23-4; Davis, J & Lowne, M, 'The Double Horizontal Dial', BSS Monograph No 5, London, 2009.
Dawes, H, 'Instruments of the Imagination', Dawes Trust, 2009, p.23-4; Davis, J & Lowne, M, 'The Double Horizontal Dial', BSS Monograph No 5, London, 2009.
provenance: