RE: Sundial by Sir Christopher Wren

2000-05-04 Thread Daniel Roth


On Wed, 3 May 2000, Mac Oglesby wrote:

 Philip Pattenden, Sundials at an Oxford 
 College. Oxford: Roman Books, 1979. ISBN 0950664405.  100 pages.

Hi Mac,

can you tell me how to get this book? Thank you.

- Daniel


Re: Sundial by Sir Christopher Wren

2000-05-04 Thread John Davis

Hi Mac et al,

If you're looking for photos of the Wren dial, I have some that I took last
summer.  I can scan them for anyone that wishes, but the files would need to
be quite large to convey all the detail.

Regards,

John
-
Dr J R Davis
Flowton, UK
52.08N, 1.043E
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

.

 If any on the Sundial List are interested in Wren's magnificent
 sundial at All Souls College but haven't seen it, I have a small jpg
 (about 45k) available.  There must be better images available
 somewhere on the internet, but I don't know where at the moment.

 Best wishes,

 Mac Oglesby




RE: Sundial by Sir Christopher Wren

2000-05-03 Thread Mac Oglesby


Hi Andrew,

Thank you for your message.

You wrote:

(snip)

It doesn't seem possible that in the more than 3 centuries since the
sundial was first installed no one has written extensively on its
design and construction.

I should think that IS actually quite possible!  I suspect that in the C18
the knowledge would have been commonplace and probably not considered worthy
of writing down.  I would be quite surprised if in the C19 and earlier C20
it had been written up.  If a recent paper by a Fellow of All Souls gives no
help then I fear you may be on a quest for something which does not exist -
but I'd be delighted to be proved wrong and to learn of what you find!  Have
you tried writing to him directly?

Best wishes,
Andrew James





Dr John Simmons, the author of Wren's Dial Remov'd, or 
High-Victorian Hubris at All Souls, is elderly, busy, and doesn't 
use email.  I've exchanged several messages with Norma 
Aubertin-Potter, Librarian in Charge, Codrington Library, who 
forwarded my questions to Dr Simmons and returned his answers. 
(Patrick Powers supplied an email address for the Library.)  She has 
been very gracious and prompt in responding, but doesn't know where 
to find the material I'm seeking.


I secured a copy of J. A. Bennett's The Mathematical Science of 
Christopher Wren through inter-library loan, but was disappointed to 
find only a brief mention of Wren's interest in sundials.  Simmons 
also lists a monograph by Pattenden, Sundials at an Oxford College, 
and I'm looking for a copy.  Norma Aubertin-Potter gave me a more 
complete reference as: Philip Pattenden, Sundials at an Oxford 
College. Oxford: Roman Books, 1979. ISBN 0950664405.  100 pages.


If any on the Sundial List are interested in Wren's magnificent 
sundial at All Souls College but haven't seen it, I have a small jpg 
(about 45k) available.  There must be better images available 
somewhere on the internet, but I don't know where at the moment.


Best wishes,

Mac Oglesby


Re: Sundial by Sir Christopher Wren

2000-05-02 Thread Eichholz

Hello Mac,

together with Charles K Aked and Nicola Severino and my 2000 articles we
created in 1997 the International Bibliography of Gnomonica with 12000
titles concerning books printed from 1500 to 1997 and articles from
international magazines.
So, if you have a question to authors, years, titles etc. you can get an
answer.

With sunny greetings

The German Sundial Society

Klaus Eichholz
Zum Ruhrblick 5
D-44797 Bochum
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




Von: Mac Oglesby [EMAIL PROTECTED]
An: Sundial mailing list sundial@rrz.uni-koeln.de
Gesendet: Samstag, 29. April 2000 17:09
Betreff: Sundial by Sir Christopher Wren



 Hello Sundial List,

 I've been trying to locate detailed information on the design and
 construction of Sir Christopher Wren's large vertical sundial
 installed at All Souls College at Oxford in 1658.  I'm familiar with
 Margaret Stanier's booklet, and I have a copy of a pamphlet published
 very recently by Dr John Simmons (of All Souls), but neither comes
 even close to providing the details I seek.

 My efforts to find information on any subject using the internet have
 generally been exercises in frustration.  I am constantly amazed by
 what some of you are able to find and would greatly appreciate any
 hints about how to conduct a successful search.

 It doesn't seem possible that in the more than 3 centuries since the
 sundial was first installed no one has written extensively on its
 design and construction.  But how to find those papers?

 Thanks for any help.

 Mac Oglesby
 Putney, Vermont  USA