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Johann Hevelius (1611-1687)
Horizontal Table Clocks
As the bourgeoisie increased during the renaissance, so did the demand for smaller horizontal table clocks and neck watches increase. These clocks were driven by a spring and used a balance as regulator which enabled them to be transportable. They originated in Southern Germany, particularly in Augsburg and Nuremberg. In Holland, clockmakers such as Salomon Coster, Severijn Oosterwijck and Jan Janse Boekelts were also developing these clocks in cities such as Haarlem, Amsterdam and The Hague. Examples originating from Danzig (Pomerania) were, for instance, designed by Johann Eichstedt, Wolfgang Günther and Johann Anton Horn.
(property of the Muzeum Narodowe, Warsaw)
(click on image to enlarge)
The development of the pendulum clock
During the 17th century, time measurement became increasingly important in the study of sciences such as astronomy. Astronomers such as Galileo Galilei, Johann Hevelius en Christiaan Huygens were involved in the development of a precision clock. Thus, the first pendulum clocks evolved. This type of clock had a free-hanging pendulum replacing the former regulator task of the balance and resulting in a much higher grade of precision, thus enabling minutes and seconds to be registered.
| Johann Hevelius (1611-1687) Johann Hevelius was the son of the successful Danziger merchant and beer brewer, Abraham Hewelke. Hevelius took over his father’s beer brewery and was also active as councillor. He married Katharina Rebesche in 1635 and the Dutch Catharina Elisabeth Koopman in 1663; the latter assisted him with his astronomical observations and, following his death, published several of his works. Hevelius started his astronomy studies in 1627 receiving private tuition from Peter Krüger (1580-1639). He was also taught the crafts of engraving, lens-grinding and mechanical construction. |
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(Engraving by Isaak Saal after Andreas Stech, 1673)
(click on image to enlarge)
Two clocks hang on the rear wall – the right-hand one is fitted with a pendulum. The clock face shows not only an hour hand but also a second hand. A clock, somewhat similar to a Hague clock, sits on the window sill.
In 1630 he then spent a year studying law at Leiden University, after which he left for London in 1631; between 1631 and 1634 he sojourned in Paris, Tours and Avignon. Following his return to Danzig, he built his first astronomical observatory in 1640 for which he developed various instruments. Several of these instruments are described and illustrated in his work “Machina coelestis pars prior…” (1673) and include an experimental pendulum clock.
This exhibition is part of Prezent, a cultural collaboration project of the Province of Noord-Holland and the Voivodship of Pomerania (Poland), organized by Kunst en Cultuur Noord-Holland and Cultureel Erfgoed Noord-Holland. The exhibition is accompanied by a free exhibition brochure. The Polish-German catalogue “Zegary Gdanskie” (Muzeum Historyczne Miasta Gdanska 2005), describing the Danzig clock industry, is available in the museum bookshop.
Wolfgang Günther (ca 1610-1659)
Hevelius requested the help of the clockmaker, Wolfgang Günther, and that of an unnamed Swedish royal instrument-maker, to construct his two prototypes of pendulum clocks. Günther, who came from Elterlein near Annaberg (Saxony), became a citizen of Danzig in 1637. He carried out restoration repairs to the sundial on the tower of the main town-hall between 1647 and 1648. He became an elder of the smith’s guild in 1654. Together with two assistants, he worked on a prototype of the pendulum clock and other instruments for Hevelius’s observatory between 1657 and 1659. Hevelius presented a small prototype to the Polish king Johan Kasimir during his visit to the observatory in 1659. That same year, Günther was interred in the crypt of the St. Erasmus chapel in the St. Mary’s church in Danzig. The observatory was burned to the ground on September 26th 1679.
- 17-3-2008
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