Archipendulum

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Indian mason at work using an archipendulum
from L'Inde française

The archipendulum is an ancient ancestor of the

plumbline
suspended from the top vertex. The horizontal bar of the A was marked at its midpoint, so that the plumbline's coincidence with this point indicated that the bases of the two legs were at the same level. Other gradations on the horizontal bar enabled the user to construct or verify inclined lines. The same methods of use apply to the inverted 'T' which is simply another variant of the archipendulum.

Used by the builders of the Egyptian pyramids and from the Indian subcontinent, it was more recently described by Johann Heinrich Alsted[1] and Leon Battista Alberti.[2]

External links

References

  1. ^ Alsted, J.H. (1626). Johannis-¬Henrici Alstedii compendium philosophicum: exhibens methodum, definitiones, canones, distinctiones & quaestiones per universam philosophiam ... Corvinus & Muderspach. Retrieved 2015-08-02.
  2. . Retrieved 2015-08-02.