TINTINHULL GARDEN (NT) . SOMERSET . ARMILLARY SPHERE

TINTINHULL HOUSE (COURT) . SOMERSET

GRADE I ⚘ C17 Attractive small manor house with lovely gardens and a small arboretum. NT. Plenty of information online. Don’t miss St Margaret’s with its remarkable scaphe dial above the porch, and 6+ scratch dials – links below. 4m NW of Yeovil

ARMILLARY SPHERE

A fine armillary sphere surmounted by a charming pairing of an exotic galleon and a delicately stylised sun. The gardens as they are now were designed by Phyllis Reiss after she and her husband bought the house in 1933. She died in 1961, leaving the property to NT. My guess is that the dial dates to mid-1930 as the new gardens took shape.

TINTINHULL GARDENS . DECORATIVE FEATURES ON THE ARMILLARY SPHERE

LINK POSTS

TINTINHULL . ST MARGARET . MULTIPLE SCRATCH DIALS

TINTINHULL . ST MARGARET . TRIPLE POLAR SCAPHE DIAL

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GSS CATEGORY: Armillary Sphere; Equatorial Dial

All photos: Keith Salvesen

OXFORD . ST GILES . ARMILLARY SPHERE

ST GILES . ARMILLARY SPHERE

The armillary sphere is on the grassy area close to St Giles churchyard, where the road north forks towards Blenheim NW, and to Banbury NE. It was evening and rain had been pelting down. The way to a pub led me past the dial, and I was tempted to see what an iPhone camera would make of it.

The dial was given to The City of Oxford in 1986 by its twin city Bonn, and made by a local blacksmith (to Bonn, that is.)

BSS RECORD: Modern equatorial memorial dial in an armillary sphere in the churchyard. The dial is the equatorial ring of an armillary sphere. It shows 6am to 6pm with raised cast Roman hour numerals and half hour dots. The other two rings are vertical – a north-south meridian ring open on the south side and an east-west ring. The axial arrow forms the gnomon. There is no nodus. It is not adjustable for latitude. The dial is mounted on a small stone slab. There is a small plaque on the slab.

Margaret Stanier in her book on Oxford dials, calls it a fine bit of ironwork, with bold numerals, easy to read. She notes that the rings are positioned so that their shadows cannot obliterate that of the gnomon.

The experiment with a phone worked quite well, I think. The details are legible, possibly more so than photos taken in sunlight. And it makes a change.

GSS Category: Armillary Sphere; Modern Dial; Oxford Sundials

All photos: Keith Salvesen