Sandglass Top

Description
Dark brown, wooden sandglass top. Three ring pattern with five holes for legs around the edge. A broad arrow is inscribed on the top plus three more inner rings.

A sandglass was a method of keeping time at sea; whether that time keeping was used to manage how long a ship sailed a particular course or for regulating the time sailors spent on watch. During sea passages the naval watch system divided 24 hours of the day into six four-hour watches with half the ships company on watch and the other half off duty. Each four-hour watch was marked every 30 minutes by ringing the ships quarterdeck bell. After the first 30 minutes, one bell would be sounded; thirty minutes later two bells, and so on up to eight bells at the end of the four-hour watch. The timing of these shifts of course was measured through the use of sandglasses.
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Object Detail


Catalogue Number
INV.565
Classification
Collection
Measurement Display
Height: 10mm
Width: 127mm
Depth: 127mm (5")
Primary Prod Date
Primary Prod Period

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