Today, all kinds of clocks and watches
give people the convenience for calculation of time. But in ancient China without
clocks and watches, how did people calculate the time?
Initially, most people identified the time according to the position of the sun,
the moon and stars in the sky. However, such method was not much accurate. Afterward,
by watching the sun, someone designed a kind of time-counter to identify the time,
i. e. the sundial. In Qin and Han dynasties, the sundial had become popular among
people. The sundial is a round plate, whose surface is carved with marks indicating
12 hours, with a copper needles erected in the center of the sundial's surface.
Under the sun, the shadow of the copper needle moves slowly on the surface with
the movement of the sun, that is, when the shadow of the copper neelde moves to
a certain mark, it is the time that the mark indicates. In this way, the calculation
of time is more accurate.
But when it is cloudy or at night, the sundial doesn't function. Later, some people
resorted to the method of dropping water or sand to calculate the time, and thereby
invented a new tool "copper kettle clepsydra".
Copper kettle clepsydra was also called "clepsydra" or "kettle clepsydra". The earliest
clepsydra was a copper pot holding water with a small hole at the bottom and a pole
with scales inserting in the center. When the water dropped through the small hole,
people would determine the time by the scale on the pole with the decline of the
water level. However, the accuracy of this method of calculation the time through
clepsydra still unsatisfactory.
As clepsydra was passed on from generation to generation, it gradually evolved into
a set of four pots, which were placed in order on a four-level wooden stand. The
one on the highest level is called "the Sun Pot", and the other threee post below
it are named "the Moon Pot", "the Star Pot" and "the Water receiving Pot" respectively.
The Sun Pot, the Moon Pot and the Star Pot all have a hole at the botton so that
water can drop through and the Water-receiving Pot has a gauge inside. The water
drops from the Sun Pot into the Moon Pot and then into the Star Pot and finally
into the Water-receiving Pot. As more and more water drops into the Water-receiving
Pot, the gauge gradually rises due to the buoyancy of water. Thus people could identify
the time by observing the every scales of the gauge emerging above the water. The
more accurate it is to calculate the time. Now, the four-level clepsydra of Yuan
and Qing Dynasties are preserved respectively in Museum of Chinese History and Palace
Museum in Beijing for the exhibition.
Sundial and copper kettle clepsydra are the crystallization of the ancient Chinese
wisdom and creativity. They were not only show us how the ancient Chinese calulated
times, but also provide precious materials for research on the development of science
and technology in ancient China.
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