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Measuring Stick thumbnail 2
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Measuring Stick

1800-1850 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Wooden measuring stick rectangular in cross section tapering from top to bottom, with a turned, baluster shaped handle. Along its length, the four rounded edges are inset with veneer pieces, each 6-7mm in length, in repeating patterns of dark, light, medium light, light, dark. With inset white strips, probably calibration marks.

On side A, measuring from the bottom the first interval is 40.3cm, the second 81.8cm, the third 164.35, the fourth 164.31, the fifth 163.85cm.

On side C, measuring from the bottom the first interval is 54.04mm, the second 108.4mm, the third 218.38mm, the fourth 218.24mm

Conditioon
Face C: Missing veneer plaques at lower end.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Wood, shaped and with veneers
Brief description
A wooden measuring stick, slightly tapered, with inlaid checkerwork. South German, ca. 1800-1850.
Physical description
Wooden measuring stick rectangular in cross section tapering from top to bottom, with a turned, baluster shaped handle. Along its length, the four rounded edges are inset with veneer pieces, each 6-7mm in length, in repeating patterns of dark, light, medium light, light, dark. With inset white strips, probably calibration marks.

On side A, measuring from the bottom the first interval is 40.3cm, the second 81.8cm, the third 164.35, the fourth 164.31, the fifth 163.85cm.

On side C, measuring from the bottom the first interval is 54.04mm, the second 108.4mm, the third 218.38mm, the fourth 218.24mm

Conditioon
Face C: Missing veneer plaques at lower end.
Dimensions
  • Length: 77.4cm (Note: This measuring stick measures 25 3/4" (655mm) from the bottom edge of its turned handle. It has a dark inlay every 1", with a mid-colour inlay every 1/2".)
Credit line
Given by Dr W.L. Hildburgh
Object history
Given by Dr W. L. Hildburgh "acquired by the donor at Nuremberg".
Historical context
The ell was used over many centuries by tailors as a standard measure for cloth. Across Europe the ell varied in length from place to place and from time to time.

In England the ell is mentioned in a legal document of 1196 and in Magna Carta. Tailors’ ell sticks are mentioned in documents from the early 1500s and in English inventories from 1578. Elizabeth I confirmed the English ell at 45 inches, and an official measuring stick, calibrated with this length, still exists (Science Museum, London). The ell was abolished by statute in 1824 (Act 5 GIV c74).

The ell was used in German speaking countries and in France (called there an aune). A German inventory of the late 1600s mentions eight wooden ells among a tailor’s possessions. An ell being used to measure cloth appears an illustration in a French publication of 1771.

This stick closely resembles tailors’ ell rules illustrated in Eichen, Wiegen, Messen um den Freiburger Münstermarkt / mit Beiträgen von Mona Djabbarpour ... [et al], Catalogue of an exhibition held at Augustinermuseum Freiburg, 31 Jan. - 27 Apr. 2003. (NAL: 603.AD.0506), and figures 298 and 299 in Pinto, Edward. Treen and other bygones. An encyclopaedia and social history. London, G Bell and Sons, 1969, Pinto also makes the point that such rulers were made in England, but survivals of these “are extremely rare, possibly because they were unornamented”.

Collection
Accession number
W.11B-1946

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Record createdMarch 21, 2011
Record URL
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