Photography Equatorial Armillary Sphere in the Ancient Beijing Observatory

Photography Equatorial Armillary Sphere in the Ancient Beijing Observatory

CC BY-SA 4.0

CC BY-SA 4.0 europeana.eu

A black-and-white photograph showing one of the instruments on the platform of the Beijing Gu Guanxiangtai Observatory 北京古觀像台. Most of the instruments preserved today, including those in the photographs of Skušek’s album, were made by Jesuits in the 17th and 18th centuries. The equatorial armillary sphere (chidao jingweiyi 赤道經緯儀) has 180-centimetre measuring circles for the meridian, horizon, and celestial equator. The sphere stands on a richly decorated supporting column. It weighs 2,720 kilograms and is 3,380 metres high. The instrument is one of eight astronomical measuring instruments currently on display at the observatory – now a museum.

The Old Beijing Observatory is one of the few observatories from the period before the invention of the telescope that have survived to the present day. The site covers 10,000 square metres with a main brick platform measuring 40 by 40 metres and 15 metres high. Today, the observatory is a museum open to the ... more

A black-and-white photograph showing one of the instruments on the platform of the Beijing Gu Guanxiangtai Observatory 北京古觀像台. Most of the instruments preserved today, including those in the photographs of Skušek’s album, were made by Jesuits in the 17th and 18th centuries. The equatorial armillary sphere (chidao jingweiyi 赤道經緯儀) has 180-centimetre measuring circles for the meridian, horizon, and celestial equator. The sphere stands on a richly decorated supporting column. It weighs 2,720 kilograms and is 3,380 metres high. The instrument is one of eight astronomical measuring instruments currently on display at the observatory – now a museum.

The Old Beijing Observatory is one of the few observatories from the period before the invention of the telescope that have survived to the present day. The site covers 10,000 square metres with a main brick platform measuring 40 by 40 metres and 15 metres high. Today, the observatory is a museum open to the public. It was built during the reign of Emperor Kangxi 康熙 (reigned 1661–1722) – on the foundations of a 12th-century precursor. Renovations were carried out under the supervision of Flemish Jesuit and missionary Father Ferdinand Verbiest (1623–1688). In 1900 the observatory was looted by the French invaders, but in 1902 the instruments were returned “to their place”. In 1956 the observatory became a museum.

The photograph is the 167th of 449 photographs of Beijing and its surroundings in the album of Ivan Skušek Jr., purchased during his stay in Beijing (1914–1920). In the handwritten inventory of the album, the photograph is referred to as Sternwarte: Kalender-Kreise. (DZ, MV)

Place of manufacture: Beijing
Manufacturing technique: black-and-white photograph
Dimensions: length: 8.5 cm, width: 13.5 cm
No. of parts: 1
Current owner: Slovene Ethnographic Museum
Date of the last acquisition: 1963
Previous owners and periods of ownership: Ivan Skušek, Jr. and Tsuneko Kondō Kawase - Marija Skušek, National Museum of Slovenia, Slovene Ethnographic Museum
Object condition, handling and damage: bluish discolouration of black colour

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