
A General History of Horology
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Content
- Introduction
- Horology: The word
- Hour Systems
- 1: Jérôme Bonnin: Time measurement in Antiquity
- 2: India and the Far East: dials, water-clocks, fire-clocks
- India
- China to 1900
- Modern China
- Japan
- 3: Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages
- Sun-dials and water-clocks in Byzantium and Islam
- Time-reckoning in the Medieval Latin world
- Water-clocks and the earliest escapements
- Sand-clocks, sand-glasses, and fire-clocks
- 4: Marisa Addomine: Public clocks: fourteenth to eighteenth centuries
- 5: The domestic clock in Europe
- From the fifteenth century to the mid-seventeenth century
- From Huygens to the end of the eighteenth century.
- 6: David Thompson: Watches in Europe 1600 - 1800
- 7: Anthony Turner: The Structures of horological manufacture and trade: sixteenth to eighteenth centuries
- 8: Denis Savoie: The development of the sundial fourteenth to twentieth centuries
- 9: Clocks as astronomical models
- Planetary clocks to the end of the eighteenth century
- The nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
- 10: Sharon Kerman: Musical and automaton clocks and watches: sound and motion in time-telling devices
- 11: Jonathan Betts: The quest for precision in astronomy and navigation
- 12: Anthony Turner: Decimal Time
- 13: Industrial manufacture: clock and watch-making in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
- The mixed fortunes of Britain
- American horology and its global reach
- The horological endeavour in France
- The challenge of the Swiss and their competitors
- Developing the German industry
- A case-study in standardisation: la pendule de Paris
- 14: Jonathan Betts: Precision attained: chronometers and regulators in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
- 15: Catherine Cardinal: Responding to customer demand: the decoration of clocks and watches from the Renaissance to recent times
- 16: Roger Smith: Eighteenth-century clock exports from Britain to the East Indies
- 17: Marisa Addomine: Public clocks in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
- 18: David Boettcher: Wrist-watches from their origins to the twenty-first century
- 19: James Nye, David Rooney: Electricity, horology, and networked time
- 20: Joëlle Mauerhan: Women in horology
- 21: Jonathan Betts: The keeping of clocks and watches: maintenance, repair and restoration
- 22: Estelle Fallet: Accessories in horology
- 23: Applications of clockwork
- Orreries and planetaria
- Timers and telescope drives
- Metronomes
- Car clocks
- Watchmans' clocks
- Roasting jacks
- 24: Christina Faraday: Horology verbalised; horology visualised
- 25: Bernhard Huber: The Literature of horology
- 26: Anthony Turner: Collecting and writing the history of horology
- 27: Glossary
- 28: Bibliography
- Index
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