Items Similar to 17th Century German Portable Ivory Sundial — Possibly Nuremberg
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 12
17th Century German Portable Ivory Sundial — Possibly Nuremberg
$2,390.44
£1,787.60
€2,000
CA$3,295.67
A$3,617.08
CHF 1,900.83
MX$43,042.52
NOK 24,298.24
SEK 22,203.78
DKK 15,240.83
About the Item
Rare portable sundial crafted in engraved ivory, a fine example of German scientific instrument making from the 17th century, likely produced in Nuremberg, renowned for its precision craftsmanship and innovation in horology.
Beautifully engraved with intricate calibrations and delicate detailing, this compact sundial exemplifies the marriage of science and artistry characteristic of early modern European instrumentation.
Dimensions: 5 × 3 × 1 cm (2 × 1.2 × 0.4 in).
A remarkable and highly collectible 17th-century scientific instrument, prized for its historical value, refined workmanship, and rarity—an exquisite piece for collectors of antique horology and navigation instruments.
- Dimensions:Height: 0.4 in (1 cm)Width: 1.19 in (3 cm)Depth: 1.97 in (5 cm)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Period:1600-1609
- Date of Manufacture:1650
- Condition:
- Seller Location:Madrid, ES
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU5779247342052
About the Seller
4.8
Platinum Seller
Premium sellers with a 4.7+ rating and 24-hour response times
Established in 2005
1stDibs seller since 2021
395 sales on 1stDibs
Typical response time: 1 hour
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Shipping from: Madrid, Spain
- Return Policy
More From This Seller
View All18th Century German Portable Ivory Sundial — Possibly Nuremberg
Located in Madrid, ES
Exceptional portable sundial made of engraved ivory, a fine example of German craftsmanship from the 18th century, possibly produced in Nuremberg, one of Europe’s historic centers fo...
Category
Antique Early 18th Century Scientific Instruments
Materials
Bone
19th Century Portable Wooden Sundial
Located in Madrid, ES
Charming portable sundial crafted in engraved wood, dating from the 19th century.
This compact timekeeping instrument exemplifies the practical elegance and craftsmanship of traditio...
Category
Antique Mid-19th Century Scientific Instruments
Materials
Fruitwood
19th Century Portable Wooden Sundial
Located in Madrid, ES
Charming portable sundial crafted in engraved wood, dating from the 19th century.
This compact timekeeping instrument exemplifies the practical elegance and craftsmanship of traditio...
Category
Antique Mid-19th Century Scientific Instruments
Materials
Fruitwood
19th Century Portable Sundial in Wooden Case
Located in Madrid, ES
19th Century Portable Sundial in Wooden Case
Charming portable sundial from the 19th century, housed in its original wooden case.
This compact instrument exemplifies the craftsmanshi...
Category
Antique 1870s Scientific Instruments
Materials
Fruitwood
19th Century Portable Sundial in Wooden Case
Located in Madrid, ES
19th Century Portable Sundial in Wooden Case
Charming portable sundial from the 19th century, housed in its original wooden case.
This compact instrument exemplifies the craftsmanshi...
Category
Antique 1870s Scientific Instruments
Materials
Fruitwood
19th Century Portable Sundial Signed “Dollond London” — Wood and Brass
Located in Madrid, ES
Elegant 19th-century portable sundial, signed “Dollond London”, finely crafted in wood and brass.
The renowned Dollond family of London were among the most distinguished makers of sc...
Category
Antique 1880s Scientific Instruments
Materials
Fruitwood
You May Also Like
An ivory dyptich sundial, Germany, 17th century.
Located in Milan, IT
Ivory diptych sundial for latitude 48 degrees with vertical and horizontal dials, pin gnomon for Italian hours and lunar volvelle. Compass needle and glass cover. On the plain back ...
Category
Antique Early 17th Century German Scientific Instruments
Materials
Ivory
: Wooden pocket diptych sundial Ernst Christoph Stocket. Germany 1780 - 1811.
Located in Milan, IT
Wooden pocket diptych sundial Ernst Christoph Stocket - type, Bavaria. A folding wooden sundial is partially covered in paper with engraved/printed decorations and text. A compass is...
Category
Antique Late 18th Century German Scientific Instruments
Materials
Wood, Paper
Mechanical Equatorial Sundial, Johann Michael Bergauer, Ante 1745
By Johann Michael Bergauer
Located in Milano, IT
Johann Michael Bergauer (Simonsfeld, 1676 - Innsbruck, 1745 circa)
Mechanical equatorial sundial
Signed: Michael Bergauer Insprugg? Innsbruck?
Ante 1745
Gilded and silvered brass; glass.
Measures: closed 1.29 x 3.50 x 4.92 in (33 x 89 x 125 mm); open 5.19 x 3.50 x 3.81 in (132 x 89 x 97 mm).
Weight: the sundial 0.49 lb (224 g); the case 0, 20 lb (95 g)
Original wooden case covered in brown leather.
State of conservation: very good. It has some signs of use. The spring that allowed for the two parts of the instrument to remain open is missing (absent even in the comparative specimens kept in museums).
The sundial is composed of two overlapping plates hinged together on the north edge.
The base plate is octagonal and is supported by three turned legs. The upper face is gilded and a compass with a magnetic variation index has been inserted. The rest of the surface is occupied by a rich decoration of engraved scrolls, centered around the inscription “Michael Bergauer Insprugg”. A foldable oval support with a plumb-bob is attached with a hinge on the southern edge. On the reverse of the base plate a table of the latitudes of some European cities (expanded with the vertical writing “Meiland 40” on the edge and “Rome” deleted) and of Jerusalem has been engraved. A Cam marked for 0 °-70 ° is applied near the northern edge. This can be adjusted to change the inclination of the upper plate according to the latitude; originally a spring, now lost, made it possible to keep the two plates of the clock open.
The second plate is round, has a toothed edge and measures 3.26 in (83 mm) in diameter: it is slightly smaller than the octagonal base which it rests upon and overlaps when the instrument is closed.
The recto is gilded and there are three concentric graduated circles engraved on it:
- the outermost is the equatorial hour dial, numbered I-XII, I-XII;
- the second-one is that of days 1-30 of the lunar month and has “Aetas lunae” engraved on it;
- the third, silvered, is a subsidiary hour dial, with double numbering 1-12; originally it could have been rotated.
The engravings of the first two circles are enameled in red.
In the center - on the polar axis - there is an alidade, at the end of which is associated the silvered minute dial. This, in turn, is welded, perpendicularly, to a small disc, also silvered, with a triangular gnomon. The plate, alidade and minute dial are connected to each other by toothed mechanisms.
Below is the procedure for measuring the time:
1) Adjust the Cam under the base of the clock, based on the latitude of your location;
2) Place the watch on a flat surface using the plumb-bob and with the side closest to the compass facing south;
3) Keeping the instrument still, manually rotate the alidade until the shadow cast by the triangular gnomon on the small silvered disc falls on the line marked below it;
4) The hour and minutes can therefore be read on the hour and minute dials set on the alidade respectively.
Johann Michael Bergauer, who sometimes only signs his works as Michael Bergauer, was born in Simonsfeld, north of Vienna. His apprenticeship as a watchmaker took place in Landshut and he probably worked as a laborer in Augsburg before becoming a watchmaker at the court of Karl Philipp von der Pfalz in Innsbruck in 1708. In the following years, his repeated attempts to obtain Innsbruck citizenship are documented and, in 1721, he is listed as a resident. In 1724 he was admitted to the guild of watchmakers, with which however he had continuous problems. In 1732 he presented a "masterpiece". This is the last reference to his business; he must have died before or in 1745 because in that year his widow appealed to the City Council.
The mechanical sundial...
Category
Antique 1730s Austrian Baroque Scientific Instruments
Materials
Brass
Antique 18th Century Diptych Portable Sundial And Compass by Beringer
By David Beringer
Located in Bilzen, BE
Antique 18th Century Diptych Sundial and Compass a portable wooden sundial with compass, of German origin, by David Beringer, Nuremberg, dating back to the 1780 circa, in good age re...
Category
Antique Late 18th Century German Louis XVI Scientific Instruments
Materials
Metal
A Stockert-pattern Fruitwood Diptych Pocket Sundial
Located in Firenze, IT
A Stockert-pattern fruitwood diptych sundial,
the lid with applied paper list of towns and cities and their latitudes (mostly rubbed off), the inside of the lid with string gnomon an...
Category
Antique 1780s German Neoclassical Desk Accessories
A German Stockert Pattern Fruitwood Diptych Pattern Pocket Sundial
Located in Firenze, IT
A German Stockert pattern fruitwood diptych pattern pocket sundial signed, early 19th century The upper leaf with central column printed with eight positions for the string gnomen fr...
Category













