Online Encyclopedia

CLEPSYDRA (from Gr. rc1,Eirrerr, to s...

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 496 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CLEPSYDRA (from Gr. rc1,Eirrerr, to steal, and
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Mop,
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water)
  , the chronometer of the Greeks and Romans, which measured time by the flow of
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water . In its simplest form it was a short-necked earthenware globe of known capacity, pierced at the bottom with several small holes, through which the water escaped or " stole away," The instrument was employed to set a limit to the speeches in courts of justice, hence the phrases aquam dare, to give the advocate speaking time, and aquam perdere, to waste time . Smaller clepsydrae of glass were very early used in place of the sun-
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dial, to mark the hours . But as the length of the
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hour varied according to the season of the
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year, various arrangements, of which we have no clear account, were necessary to obviate this and other defects . For instance, the flow of water varied with the temperature and pressure of the air, and secondly, the
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rate of flow became less as the vessel emptied itself . The latter defect was remedied by keeping the level of the water in the clepsydra
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uniform, the
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volume of that discharged being noted .
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Plato is said to have invented a complicated clepsydra to indicate the hours of the
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night as well as of the day . In the clepsydra or
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hydraulic
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clock of Ctesibius of Alexandria, made about 135 B.C., the
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movement of water-wheels caused the gradual rise of a little figure, which pointed out the hours with a little stick on an
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index attached to the machine . The clepsydra is said to have been known to the Egyptians . There was one in the Tower of the Winds at Athens; and the turret on the south side of the tower is supposed to have contained the cistern which supplied the water . See Marquardt, Das Privatleben der Romer, i . (2nd ed., 1886), p 992; G .

Bilfinger, Die Zeitmesser der antiken Volker (1886), and Die antiken Stundenangaben (1888) .

End of Article: CLEPSYDRA (from Gr. rc1,Eirrerr, to steal, and Mop, water)
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