The “Panchronologia”

£500,000

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[Brass Astrolabe and Slide Rule]

[?MARKE, John]
[1678]
Brass astrolabe, the front of the plate engraved for a universal astrolabe with De Rojas projection, graduated regula and cursor, below the throne a table of 24 stars and a perpetual calendar for Leap Years and Epact, dated 1678; the reverse of the plate with scales for a circular slide rule with scales for tangents, sines and numbers, two rotating index arms.
713 by 659mm (28 by 26 inches).
22198

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One of the largest and grandest computational devices made in the seventeenth century.

The so styled "Panchronologia" combines one of the most ancient of scientific instruments, the astrolabe, with one of its most modern (for the time) the slide rule. At 26 inches (66 cm) in diameter and weighing 23 lbs (10.4kg) it is not only one of the largest astrolabes ever produced but arguably the largest computational device to have survived from the seventeenth century, a...

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provenance:

provenance:

Provenance:

Sir John Houblon (1632-1712), thence by descent.

Exhibited: London: Royal Society Soirée, 14 May 1902.