| Francis Line's magnetic clock | Site
map
Timeline Reconstruction Acknowledgements |
Francis Line's Magnetic clock, from Sylvestro Pietrasancta, De Symbolis Heroicis, Antwerp, Ex officina Plantiniana Balthasaris Moreti, 1634. (click on the image for an enlargement) |
The version of the magnetic clock that
first caught the attention of European literati was created by the
English Jesuit Francis Line in the Belgian town of Liège. Line showed
his clock to the Papal Nuncio to Cologne, Monsignor Pierluigi Caraffa,
who was visiting Liège in the company of his Jesuit confessor, Sylvestro
Pietrasancta. Caraffa took Lineās clock to his house, and observed it for
several days, finding that it kept very accurate time. When Godefrid Wendelin
inquired of Line whether there was anything inside the sphere that caused
it to rotate, Line just shrugged his shoulders, "sufficiently damning my
incivil curiosity in this way", as Wendelin later reported to Gassendi.
Pietrasancta included the following description
of the clock in his book of personal emblems, De symbolis heroicis,
published in Antwerp in 1634, with a frontispiece
designed by Rubens:
|
Website created by Michael
John Gorman, April 2001. Comments, questions or suggestions to mgorman@stanford.edu