• English Globe

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    The 'English Globe' is a rare example of an immobile globe, whose sphere does not rotate but is fixed in place over a planisphere. Its fixed position allows complex calculations to be performed more easily than with a turning sphere.

    Roger Palmer XR (1634-1705), Earl of Castlemaine and Cambridge-educated son of Sir James Palmer, collaborated with Joseph Moxon (1627-1691), son and apprentice of printer James Moxon, in 1679 to produce an instrument that they named the 'English Globe'

    The English Globe is the only known immobile globe, its sphere fixed in position on a pedestal, rather than being held in a meridian ring that could be rotated in a horizon band (Image 2). The English Globe constitutes the only known truly Ptolemaic G globe, representing the Earth as stationary rather than moving, as it is in the Copernican system G . The Earl of Castlemaine did not believe in a geocentric universe but constructed the globe in this way to make it more practically useful. As described by Castlemaine in The English Globe, published in 1679, the globe's novel construction meant that it could be used to solve many conventional practical globe problems.

    Outdoor globe use:
    The sphere of the English Globe was set above a planisphere appropriate for the latitude of London and was fixed with the south of England uppermost, parallel with the horizon. This meant that when composed (that is, levelled and orientated north-south in the Sun's rays) the English Globe was an exact replica of the Earth itself. Most of the English Globe's many functions, as described in Castlemaine's publication, required the globe to be used outside on a fine day so that the rays of the Sun fell on the sphere as they did on the Earth itself. Many of the English Globe's functions pertained to dialling, the art of constructing and using sundials, which became increasingly popular in the course of the 17th century.

    Production of the English Globe:
    X-ray image of the English globe, showing (bottom right) the twisted metal stand and (top centre) a loose bag of lead shot inside the sphere. Lead shot was used to weight spheres, ensuring they turned smoothly. Its presence shows that this sphere was originally intended for a turning globe.
    Castlemaine designed the English Globe after seeing one of Moxon's pocket globes and Moxon executed Castlemaine's design, from cartography to instrument construction. Moxon used existing materials to craft the unique instrument, updating existing plates for the cartography and then applying the printed gores to a blank sphere originally intended for a turning globe. We know that this is the case because a loose bag of lead shot, used to balance spheres to allow a steady turn, is visible in x-rays of the instrument that were taken during conservation work in the 1990s.
    Moxon also brought his own interests as a printer to bear on the English Globe, using different typescripts to distinguish old and new names for the same localities. For instance, archaic names for localities were inscribed in Gothic type. Thus, Sumatra and Zeilan (Sri Lanka) were also labelled 'Taprobane' as they had both previously been known.

    73, Scott KF5JRV
    Pmail: KF5JRV @ KF5JRV.#NWAR.AR.USA.NA
    Email: KF5JRV@GMAIL.com

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