English units
English units were the
Use of the term "English units" can be ambiguous, as, in addition to the meaning used in this article, it is sometimes used to refer to the units of the descendant Imperial system as well to those of the descendant system of United States customary units.[1]
The two main sets of English units were the
In England (and the British Empire), English units were replaced by Imperial units in 1824 (effective as of 1 January 1826) by a
History
Very little is known of the
Prior to the enactment of a law known as the "
The
Later development of the English system was by defining the units in laws and by issuing measurement standards. Standards were renewed in 1496, 1588, and 1758.[7] The last Imperial Standard Yard in bronze was made in 1845; it served as the standard in the United Kingdom until the yard was redefined by the international yard and pound agreement (as 0.9144 metres) in 1959 (statutory implementation was in the Weights and Measures Act of 1963). Over time, the English system had spread to other parts of the British Empire.
Timeline
Selected excerpts from the bibliography of Marks and Marking of Weights and Measures of the British Isles[8]
- 1215 Magna Carta — the earliest statutory declaration for uniformity of weights and measures
- 1335 8 & 9 Edw. 3. c. 1 — First statutory reference describing goods as avoirdupois
- 1414 2 Hen. 5. c. 4 — First statutory mention of the Troy pound
- 1495 12 Hen. 7. c. 5 — New Exchequer standards were constructed, including Winchester capacity measures defined by Troy weight of their content of threshed wheat by stricken (i.e. level) measure (first statutory mention of Troy weight as standard weight for bullion, bread, spices etc.).[9]
- 1527 Hen VIII — Abolished the Tower pound
- 1531 23 Hen. 8. c. 4 — Barrel to contain 36 gallons of beer or 32 of ale; kilderkin is half of this; firkin is half again.[10]
- 1532 24 Hen. 8. c. 3 — First statutory references to use of avoirdupois weight.[11]
- 1536 28 Hen. 8. c. 4 — Added the tierce (41 gallons)
- 1588 (Elizabeth I) — A new series of Avoirdupois standard bronze weights (bell-shaped from 56 lb to 2 lb and flat-pile from 8 lb to a dram), with new Troy standard weights in nested cups, from 256 oz to 1⁄8 oz in a binary progression.
- 1601–1602 — Standard bushels and gallons were constructed based on the standards of Henry VII and a new series of capacity measures were issued.
- 1660 12 Cha. 2. c. 24 — Barrel of beer to be 36 gallons, taken by the gauge of the Exchequer standard of the ale quart; barrel of ale to be 32 gallons; all other liquors retailed to be sold by the wine gallon
- 1689 1 Will. & Mar.c. 24 — Barrels of beer and ale outside London to contain 34 gallons
- 1695 7 Will. 3. c. 24 (I) — Irish Act about grain measures decreed: unit of measure to be Henry VIII's gallon as confirmed by Elizabeth I; i.e. 272+1⁄4 cubic inches; standard measures of the barrel (32 gallons), half-barrel (16 gallons), bushel (8), peck (2), and gallon lodged in the Irish Exchequer; and copies were provided in every county, city, town, etc.
- 1696 8 & 9 Will. 3. c. 22 — Size of Winchester bushel "every round bushel with a plain and even bottom being 18+1⁄2″ wide throughout and 8″ deep" (i.e. a dry measure of 2150 in3 per gallon).
- 1706 6 Ann.c. 11 — Act of Union decreed the weights and measures of England to be applied in Scotland, whose burgs (towns) were to take charge of the duplicates of the English Standards sent to them.
- 1706 6 Ann.c. 27 — Wine gallon to be a cylindrical vessel with an even bottom 7″ diameter throughout and 6″ deep from top to bottom of the inside, or holding 231 in3 and no more.
- 1713 12 Ann.c. 17 — The legal coal bushel to be round with a plain and even bottom, 19+1⁄2 inches from outside to outside and to hold 1 Winchester bushel and 1 quart of water.
- 1718 5 Geo. 1. c. 18 — Decreed Scots Pint to be exactly 103 in3.
- 1803 43 Geo. 3. c. 151 — Referred to wine bottles making about 5 to the wine gallon (i.e. Reputed Quarts)
- 1824 Weights and Measures Act 1824completely reorganized British metrology and established Imperial weights and measures; defined the yard, troy and avoirdupois pounds and the gallon (as the standard measure for liquids and dry goods not measured by heaped measure), and provided for a 'brass' standard gallon to be constructed.
- 1825 6 Geo. 4. c. 12 — Delayed introduction of Imperial weights and measures from 1 May 1825 to 1 January 1826.
- 1835 Weights and Measures Act 1835 abolished local and customary measures, including the Winchester bushel; made heaped measure illegal; required trade to be carried out by avoirdupois weight only, except for bullion, gems and drugs (which were to be sold by troy weight instead); decreed that all forms of coal were to be sold by weight and not measure; legalised the 'stone' as 14 lb (6.4 kg), the 'hundredweight' as 112 lb (51 kg), and the (long) ton as 20 hundredweight, or 2,240 lb (1,020 kg).
- 1853 16 & 17 Vict.c. 29 — Permitted the use of decimal bullion weights.
- 1866 29 & 30 Vict. c. 82 — Standards of Weights, Measures, and Coinage Act 1866transferred all duties and standards from the Exchequer to the newly created Standards Department of the Board of Trade.
- 1878 Weights and Measures Act 1878defined the Imperial standard yard and pound; enumerated the secondary standards of measure and weight derived from the Imperial standards; required all trade by weight or measure to be in terms of one of the Imperial weights or measures or some multiple part thereof; abolished the Troy pound.
- 1963 c. 31 — Weights and Measures Act 1963abolished the chaldron of coal, the fluid drachm and minim (effective 1 February 1971), discontinued the use of the quarter, abolished the use of the bushel and peck, and abolished the pennyweight (from 31 January 1969).
Length
English unit | SI (metric) | Traditional definition |
---|---|---|
Line | 2.12 mm | = 1⁄4 of a barleycorn[13] |
Barleycorn | 8.47 mm | = 1⁄3 of an inch, the notional base unit under the Composition of Yards and Perches. |
Digit | 19.05 mm | = 3⁄4 inch |
Finger | 22.23 mm | = 7⁄8 inch |
Inch | 25.4 mm | 3 barleycorns (the historical legal definition) |
Nail | 57.15 mm | 3 digits = 2+1⁄4 inches = 1⁄16 yard |
Palm | 76.2 mm | 3 inches |
Hand | 101.6 mm | 4 inches |
Shaftment | 165 mm or 152 mm | Width of the hand and outstretched thumb, 6+1⁄2 inches before 12th century, 6 thereafter[14] |
Link | 201.2 mm | 7.92 inches or one 100th of a chain.[15] (A modern Indian surveyor's chain has 200 mm links.) |
Span | 228.6 mm | Width of the outstretched hand, from the tip of the thumb to the tip of the little finger, 3 palms = 9 inches. |
Foot | 304.8 mm | Prior to the Anglo-Saxon invasions, the Roman foot of 11.65 inches (296 mm) was used. The Anglo-Saxons introduced a North-German foot of 13.2 inches (335 mm), divided into 4 palms or 12 thumbs, while the Roman foot continued to be used in the construction crafts. In the late 13th century, the modern foot of 304.8 mm was introduced, equal to exactly 10⁄11 Anglo-Saxon foot. |
Cubit | 457.2 mm | From fingertips to elbow, 18 inches. |
Yard | 0.914 m | 3 feet = 36 inches, the practical base unit, defined as the length of the prototype bar held by the Crown or Exchequer .
|
Ell |
1.143 m | From fingertip of outstretched arm to opposite shoulder, 20 nails = 1+1⁄4 yard or 45 inches. Mostly for measuring cloth. |
Fathom | 1.829 m | 6 feet, distance between arms outstretched, from fingertip to fingertip, on a 6-foot-tall person. |
Rod | 5 m | Also called a Allotment gardens. (See also perch as an area and a volume unit .)
|
Chain | 20.116 m | Four linear rods. Named after the length of surveyor's chain used to measure distances until quite recently. Any of several actual chains used for land surveying and divided in links. Gunter's chain , introduced in the 17th century, is 66 feet (20.1 metres).
|
Furlong | 201.168 m | Notionally the distance a plough team could furrow without rest, but actually a measure of 40 rods or 600 feet prior to the Composition of Yards and Perches; 40 rods or 660 feet since then. (See also the Ancient Greek stadion or 'stade'.) |
Mile | 1.61 km | 5280 feet or 1760 yards. Originally the Roman mile, 1000 paces, later reckoned as 5000 feet, but adjusted to 5280 feet in 1593 to account for the differences introduced to these methods of reckoning by the Composition of Yards and Perches. |
League | 4.83 km | Notionally an hour's march, but usually reckoned as three miles. Approximate length of the traditional "mile" in German and Scandinavian countries. |
Area
English unit | SI ("metric") | Relationship |
---|---|---|
Square rod | 25.29 m2 |
30.25 square yards. A square rod is also known as a square pole or a square perch. Sometimes the word 'square' is omitted when the context clearly indicates that the subject is area, notably so in the case of British allotment gardens .
|
Rood | 1,012 m2 | One quarter of an acre; one 'furlong' in length by one 'rod' in width; 40 square 'rods'. The rood was sometimes called an acre itself in many ancient contexts.[citation needed] |
Acre | 4,047 m2 | An area of land one chain (four rods) wide by one furlong in length. As the traditional furlong could vary in length from country to country, so did the acre. In England an acre was 4,840 square yards (4,050 m2), in Scotland 6,150 square yards (5,140 m2) and in Ireland 7,840 square yards (6,560 m2). It is a Saxon unit, meaning "field". |
Bovate |
6 ha | The area that one ox can plough in a single year (also called an oxgang). Approximately 15 acres or one eighth of a carucate. |
Virgate | 12 ha | The area that a pair of oxen can plough in a single year. Approximately 30 acres (also called yard land). |
Carucate | 49 ha | The area that can be ploughed by one eight-oxen team in a single year (also called a plough or carve). Approximately 120 acres. |
Administrative units
- Hide
- four to eight bovates. A unit of yield, rather than area, it measured the amount of land able to support a single household for agricultural and taxation purposes.
- Knight's fee
- five hides. A knight's fee was expected to produce one fully equipped soldier for a knight's retinue in times of war.
- wapentake
- 100 hides grouped for administrative purposes.
Volume
This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2017) |
Many measures of
General liquid measures
Name | Approx SI equiv. |
Notes |
---|---|---|
Minim | 0.06 mL |
Also known as a drop. [a] |
Dram | 3.55 mL | 60 drachm .
|
Teaspoon | 5 mL | 80 minim or drops or 1⁄6 fl oz |
Tablespoon | 15 mL | 4 dram (240 minim or drops), 3 teaspoons, or 1⁄2 fl oz |
Jack | 71 mL | 1⁄2 Gill. This is not a traditional measure. |
Gill |
142 mL | 1⁄4 pint, or 1⁄32 gallon, in some dialects 1⁄2 pint. Pronounced as "Jill" |
Pint | 568 mL | 1⁄8 gallon |
Quart | 1.136 litre | 2 pints or 1⁄4 gallon |
Pottle |
2.272 L | 2 quarts or 1⁄2 gallon |
Gallon | 4.544 L | 8 pints |
Liquid measures as binary submultiples of their respective gallons (ale or wine):
jack | gill | pint | quart | pottle | gallon | 2n gal. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 jack = | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄8 | 1⁄16 | 1⁄32 | 1⁄64 | –6 |
1 gill = | 2 | 1 | 1⁄4 | 1⁄8 | 1⁄16 | 1⁄32 | –5 |
1 pint = | 8 | 4 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | 1⁄8 | –3 |
1 quart = | 16 | 8 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | –2 |
1 pottle = | 32 | 16 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | –1 |
1 gallon = | 64 | 32 | 8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
Wine
Wine is traditionally measured based on the wine gallon and its related units. Other liquids such as brandy, spirits, mead, cider, vinegar, oil, honey, and so on, were also measured and sold in these units.[17]
The wine gallon was re-established by Queen Anne in 1707 after a 1688 survey found the Exchequer no longer possessed the necessary standard but had instead been depending on a copy held by the Guildhall.[citation needed] Defined as 231 cubic inches, it differs from the later imperial gallon, but is equal to the United States customary gallon.
- Rundlet
- 18 wine gallons or 1⁄7 wine pipe
- Wine barrel
- 31.5 wine gallons or 1⁄2 wine hogshead
- Tierce
- 42 wine gallons, 1⁄2 puncheon or 1⁄3 wine pipe
- Wine hogshead
- 2 wine barrels, 63 wine gallons[18] or 1⁄4 wine tun
- Puncheon or tertian
- 2 tierce, 84 wine gallons or 1⁄3 wine tun
- Wine pipeor butt
- 2 wine hogshead, 3 tierce, 7 roundlet or 126 wine gallons
- Wine tun
- 2 wine pipe, 3 puncheon or 252 wine gallons
gallon | rundlet | barrel | tierce | hogshead | puncheon, tertian | pipe, butt | tun | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | tun | |||||||
1 | 2 | pipes, butts | ||||||
1 | 1+1⁄2 | 3 | puncheons, tertians | |||||
1 | 1+1⁄3 | 2 | 4 | hogsheads | ||||
1 | 1+1⁄2 | 2 | 3 | 6 | tierces | |||
1 | 1+1⁄3 | 2 | 2+2⁄3 | 4 | 8 | barrels | ||
1 | 1+3⁄4 | 2+1⁄3 | 3+1⁄2 | 4+2⁄3 | 7 | 14 | rundlets | |
1 | 18 | 31+1⁄2 | 42 | 63 | 84 | 126 | 252 | gallons (wine) |
3.785 | 68.14 | 119.24 | 158.99 | 238.48 | 317.97 | 476.96 | 953.92 | litres |
1 | 15 | 26+1⁄4 | 35 | 52+1⁄2 | 70 | 105 | 210 | gallons ( imperial )
|
4.546 | 68.19 | 119.3 | 159.1 | 238.7 | 318.2 | 477.3 | 954.7 | litres |
Ale and beer
- Pin
- 4.5 gallons or 1⁄8 beer barrel
- Firkin
- 2 pins, 9 gallons (ale, beer or goods) or 1⁄4 beer barrel
- Kilderkin
- 2 firkins, 18 gallons or 1⁄2 beer barrel
- Beer barrel
- 2 kilderkins, 36 gallons or 2⁄3 beer hogshead
- Beer hogshead
- 3 kilderkins, 54 gallons or 1.5 beer barrels
- Beer pipeor butt
- 2 beer hogsheads, 3 beer barrels or 108 gallons
- Beer tun
- 2 beer pipes or 216 gallons
gallon | firkin | kilderkin | barrel | hogshead | Year designated | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | hogsheads | |||||
1 | 1+1⁄2 | barrels | ||||
1 | 2 | 3 | kilderkins | |||
1 | 2 | 4 | 6 | firkins | ||
1 | 8 | 16 | 32 | 48 | ale gallons | (1454) |
= 4.621 L | = 36.97 L | = 73.94 L | = 147.9 L | = 221.8 L | ||
1 | 9 | 18 | 36 | 54 | beer gallons | |
= 4.621 L | = 41.59 L | = 83.18 L | = 166.4 L | = 249.5 L | ||
1 | 8+1⁄2 | 17 | 34 | 51 | ale gallons | 1688 |
= 4.621 L | = 39.28 L | = 78.56 L | = 157.1 L | = 235.7 L | ||
1 | 9 | 18 | 36 | 54 | ale gallons | 1803 |
= 4.621 L | = 41.59 L | = 83.18 L | = 166.4 L | = 249.5 L | ||
1 | 9 | 18 | 36 | 54 | imperial gallons
|
1824 |
= 4.546 L | = 40.91 L | = 81.83 L | = 163.7 L | = 245.5 L |
Grain and dry goods
The Winchester measure, also known as the corn measure, centered on the bushel of approximately 2,150.42 cubic inches, which had been in use with only minor modifications since at least the late 15th century. The word corn at that time referred to all types of grain. The corn measure was used to measure and sell many types of dry goods, such as grain, salt, ore, and oysters.[21]
However, in practice, such goods were often sold by weight. For example, it might be agreed by local custom that a bushel of wheat should weigh 60 pounds, or a bushel of oats should weigh 33 pounds. The goods would be measured out by volume, and then weighed, and the buyer would pay more or less depending on the actual weight. This practice of specifying bushels in weight for each commodity continues today. This was not always the case though, and even the same market that sold wheat and oats by weight might sell barley simply by volume. In fact, the entire system was not well standardized. A sixteenth of a bushel might be called a pottle, hoop, beatment, or quartern, in towns only a short distance apart. In some places potatoes might be sold by the firkin—usually a liquid measure—with one town defining a firkin as 3 bushels, and the next town as 2 1/2 bushels.[22]
The pint was the smallest unit in the corn measure. The corn gallon, one eighth of a bushel, was approximately 268.8 cubic inches. Most of the units associated with the corn measure were binary (sub)multiples of the bushel:[17][21]
pint | quart | pottle | gallon | peck | kenning | bushel | strike | coomb | seam | 2n gal. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 pint = | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | 1⁄8 | 1⁄16 | 1⁄32 | 1⁄64 | 1⁄128 | 1⁄256 | 1⁄512 | –3 |
1 quart = | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | 1⁄8 | 1⁄16 | 1⁄32 | 1⁄64 | 1⁄128 | 1⁄256 | –2 |
1 pottle = | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | 1⁄8 | 1⁄16 | 1⁄32 | 1⁄64 | 1⁄128 | –1 |
1 gallon = | 8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | 1⁄8 | 1⁄16 | 1⁄32 | 1⁄64 | 0 |
1 peck = | 16 | 8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | 1⁄8 | 1⁄16 | 1⁄32 | 1 |
1 kenning = | 32 | 16 | 8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | 1⁄8 | 1⁄16 | 2 |
1 bushel = | 64 | 32 | 16 | 8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | 1⁄8 | 3 |
1 strike = | 128 | 64 | 32 | 16 | 8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 | 4 |
1 coomb = | 256 | 128 | 64 | 32 | 16 | 8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 5 |
1 seam = | 512 | 256 | 128 | 64 | 32 | 16 | 8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 6 |
Other units included the wey (6 or sometimes 5 seams or quarters), and the last (10 seams or quarters).[17][21]
Specific goods
- Perch
- 24.75 cubic feet of dry stone, derived from the more commonly known perch, a unit of length equal to 16.5 feet.[23]
- Cord
- 128 cubic feet of firewood, a stack of firewood 4 ft × 4 ft × 8 ft[24]
Chemistry
At that reference, water has a density of ≃ 0.9988g⁄ml (438.0grain/imp fl oz or 1.001ozav/imp fl oz), and thus:
- = 1.096 drop.
Weight
The
The avoirdupois pound was eventually standardised as 7,000 grains and was used for all products not subject to Apothecaries's or Tower weight.[27]
Avoirdupois
English unit | SI ('Metric') | Relationship |
---|---|---|
Grain (gr) |
≈64.80 mg | 1⁄7000 of a pound |
Dram/drachm (dr) | ≈1.772 g | sixteenth of an ounce (possibly originated as the weight of silver in Ancient Greek coin drachma) |
Ounce (oz) | ≈28.35 g | 1 oz = 16 dr = 437.5 grains |
Pound (lb) | ≈453.6 g | 1 lb = 16 oz = 7000 grains ('lb' is an abbreviation for the Ancient Roman unit libra) |
Stone (st) | 6.35 kg | 1 st = 14 lb (see Stone (unit) for other values) |
Quarter (qr) | 12.7 kg | 1 qr = 1⁄4 cwt, or 2 st, or 28 lb |
Hundredweight (cwt) | 50.8 kg | 1 cwt = 112 lb, or 8 st |
Ton | 1.016 tonne | 1 ton = 20 cwt, or 2240 lb |
Nail | 3.175 kg | 1 nail = 1⁄16 cwt = 7 lb |
Clove | ? | 7 lb (wool) or 8 lb (cheese) [citation needed] |
Tod |
12.7 kg | 1 tod = 2 st = 1⁄4 cwt |
Troy and Tower
The Troy and Tower pounds and their subdivisions were used for coins and precious metals. The Tower pound, which was based upon an earlier Anglo-Saxon pound, was replaced by the Troy pound when a proclamation dated 1526 required the Troy pound to be used for mint purposes instead of the Tower pound.[28] No standards of the Tower pound are known to have survived.[29]
Established in the 8th century by
Troy
- Grain(gr)
- = 64.79891 mg
- Pennyweight (dwt)
- 24 gr ≈ 1.56 g
- Ounce(oz t)
- 20 dwt = 480 gr ≈ 31.1 g
- Pound (lb t)
- 12 oz t = 5760 gr ≈ 373 g
- Mark
- 8 oz t
Tower
- Grain(gr)
- = 45⁄64 gr t ≈ 45.6 mg
- Pennyweight (dwt)
- 32 gr T = 22+1⁄2 gr t ≈ 1.46 g
- Tower ounce
- 20 dwt T = 640 gr T = 18+3⁄4 dwt t = 450 gr t ≈ 29.2 g
- Tower pound
- 12 oz T = 240 dwt T = 7680 gr T = 225 dwt t = 5400 gr t ≈ 350 g
- Mark
- 8 oz T ≈ 233 g
Apothecary
- Grain(gr)
- = 64.79891 mg
- Scruple (s ap)
- 20 gr
- Dram (dr ap)
- 3 s ap = 60 gr
- Ounce (oz ap)
- 8 dr ap = 480 gr
- Pound (lb ap)
- 5760 gr = 1 lb t
Others
- Merchants/Mercantile pound
- 15 oz tower = 6750 gr ≈ 437.4 g
- London/Mercantile pound
- 15 oz troy = 16 oz tower = 7200 gr ≈ 466.6 g
- Mercantile stone
- 12 lb L ≈ 5.6 kg
- Butcher's stone
- 8 lb ≈ 3.63 kg
- Sack
- 26 st = 364 lb ≈ 165 kg
- The caratwas once specified as four grains in the English-speaking world.
- Some local units in the English dominion were (re-)defined in simple terms of English units, such as the Indian tolaof 180 grains.
- Tod
- This was an English weight for wool.[32] It has the alternative spelling forms of tode, todd, todde, toad, and tood.[33] It was usually 28 pounds, or two stone.[33] The tod, however, was not a national standard and could vary by English shire, ranging from 28 to 32 pounds.[33] In addition to the traditional definition in terms of pounds, the tod has historically also been considered to be 1⁄13 of a sack, 1⁄26 of a sarpler,[33] or 1⁄9 of a wey.[32]
Unit | Pounds | Ounces | Grains | Metric | |||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Avdp. | Troy | Tower | Merchant | London | Metric | Avdp. | Troy | Tower | Troy | Tower | g | kg | |||||||||
Avoirdupois | 1 | 175/144 | = 1.21527 | 35/27 | = 1.296 | 28/27 | = 1.037 | 35/36 | = 0.972 | ≈ 0.9072 | 16 | 14+7/12 | = 14.583 | 15+5/9 | = 15.5 | 7,000 | 9,955+5/9 | ≈ 454 | ≈ 5/11 | ||
Troy | 144/175 | ≈ 0.8229 | 1 | 16/15 | = 1.06 | 64/75 | = 0.853 | 4/5 | = 0.8 | ≈ 0.7465 | 13+29/175 | ≈ 13.17 | 12 | 12+4/5 | = 12.8 | 5,760 | 8,192 | ≈ 373 | ≈ 3/8 | ||
Tower | 27/35 | ≈ 0.7714 | 15/16 | = 0.9375 | 1 | 4/5 | = 0.8 | 3/4 | = 0.75 | ≈ 0.6998 | 12+12/35 | ≈ 12.34 | 11+1/4 | = 11.25 | 12 | 5,400 | 7,680 | ≈ 350 | ≈ 7/20 | ||
Merchant | 27/28 | ≈ 0.9643 | 75/64 | = 1.171875 | 5/4 | = 1.25 | 1 | 15/16 | = 0.9375 | ≈ 0.8748 | 15+3/7 | ≈ 15.43 | 14+1/16 | = 14.0625 | 15 | 6,750 | 9,600 | ≈ 437 | ≈ 7/16 | ||
London | 36/35 | ≈ 1.029 | 5/4 | = 1.25 | 4/3 | = 1.3 | 16/15 | = 1.06 | 1 | ≈ 0.9331 | 16+16/35 | ≈ 16.46 | 15 | 16 | 7,200 | 10,240 | ≈ 467 | ≈ 7/15 | |||
Metric | ≈ 1.1023 | ≈ 1.3396 | ≈ 1.4289 | ≈ 1.1431 | ≈ 1.0717 | 1 | ≈ 17.64 | ≈ 16.08 | ≈ 17.15 | 7,716 | 10,974 | = 500 | = 1/2 |
See also
- Approximate conversion of units
- Ancient Roman Units of Measurement – System of measurement used in Ancient Rome
- Comparison of the imperial and US customary measurement systems
- Domesday Book – 11th-century survey of landholding in England
- English Engineering Units – System of measurement used in the United States
- Feudalism – Legal and military structure in medieval Europe
- History of measurement
- Hundred– 120 (as in six score, rather than 100) , a unit of 100 or 120 items
- Imperial and US customary measurement systems – English (pre 1824), Imperial (post 1824) and US Customary (post 1776) units of measure
- Imperial units – System of measurements
- Long hundred – 120 (as in six score, rather than 100)
- Metrication – Conversion to the metric system of measurement
- Obsolete Scottish units of measurement– Obsolete units of measurement formerly used in Scotland
- Plan for Establishing Uniformity in the Coinage, Weights, and Measures of the United States
- Slug – Unit of mass
- poundal – unit of force in the british imperial system, equal to 1 pound feet per square second (0.138254954376 N)
- Spanish customary units– Spanish and Portuguese units of measurement
- Weights and measures– Definite magnitude of a quantity which is used as a standard for measuring the same kind of quantity
- Welsh units – historical units of measurement used in Wales
- Winchester measure – Set of legal standards of volume
Notes
- ^ The volume of a drop was not then and is not now well defined: it depends on the device and technique used to produce the drop, on the strength of the gravitational field, and on the viscosity, density, and the surface tension of the liquid.[16]
References
- ISBN 978-0-07-142867-5.
- ^ "British Imperial System". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
- ISBN 978-1-61530-108-9. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
- ^ Barbrow, L.E. and Judson, L. V. (1976) Weights and Measures of the United States. National Bureau of Standards Special Publication 447. p. 5–6
- ISBN 978-0-299-07340-4.
- ^ "The Text of Magna Carta". Fordham University. (translated to modern English. See paragraph 35.)
- ^ Knight, Charles (1840). The Penny magazine of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Volume 9. London: Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. pp. 221–2.
In 1758 the legislature turned attention to this subject; and after some investigations on the comparative lengths of the various standards, ordered a rod to be made of brass, about 38 or 39 inches long, graduated (measured) from the Royal Society's yard: this was marked "Standard Yard, 1758," and was given into the care of the clerk of the House of Commons. For commercial purposes another bar was made, with the yard marked off from the same standard; but it had two upright fixed markers, placed exactly one yard apart, between which any commercial yard measures might be placed, in order to have their accuracy tested: it was graded in feet, one of the feet was graded in inches, and one of the inches in ten parts. This standard yardstick was kept at the Exchequer. In 1760, a copy of Bird's standard, made two years before, was constructed.
- ISBN 0-9528533-0-2.
- ^ Pickering, Danby, ed. (1765). "Cap. V: For weights and measures". The Statutes at Large: from the first year of King Richard III to the thirty-first Year of King Henry VIII. Vol. 4. Cambridge: Charles Bathurst. p. 78.
- ^ Pickering, Danby, ed. (1765). "Cap. IV. An act concerning making of new barrels, kilderkins and other vessels". The Statutes at Large: from the first year of King Richard III to the thirty-first Year of King Henry VIII. Vol. 4. Cambridge: Charles Bathurst. p. 220.
Beef, pork, mutton and veal shall be sold by weight called Haver-de-pois
- ^ Pickering, Danby, ed. (1765). "Cap. III". The Statutes at Large: from the first year of King Richard III to the thirty-first Year of King Henry VIII. Vol. 4. Cambridge: Charles Bathurst. p. 251.
Beef, pork, mutton and veal shall be sold by weight called Haver-de-pois
- ^ "poppyseed". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
- ISBN 0-671-21565-5.
- ^ Rowlett, Russ. "How Many? A Dictionary of Units of Measurement". University of North Carolina. Archived from the original on 26 July 2014. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
- ^ Merriam Webster Online Dictionary, Link definition
- ^ "Drop – size". Physics and Astronomy Online. Retrieved 2010-03-29.
- ^ a b c Kirkby, Rev. Mr. John (1735). Arithmetical Institutions. London: Motte and Bathurst. Part II, page 14.
- ISBN 0-415-14416-7.
- ^ "wine barrel". Sizes. 2009-02-02. Retrieved 2018-03-27.
- ^ "English Beer and Ale Barrel". Sizes. 2002-01-23. Retrieved 2018-03-27.
- ^ a b c Trusler, John (1786). "Tables of measures and weights.". The London Adviser and Guide. London. p. 188. Archived from the original on Jun 6, 2023 – via Eighteenth Century Collections Online, Text Creation Partnership.
- ^ Bailey, John (1810). General View of the Agriculture of the County of Durham, with Observations on the Means of its Improvement. London: Richard Phillips. p. 283.
- ^ Blocksma, Mary. Reading the Numbers. New York: Penguin Books, 1989.
- ^ "cord, n 1". Oxford English Dictionary (2 ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. 1989.
from Richard Boyle, 1616
- ^ W. Dittmar (1890). Chemical arithmetic (1 ed.). Glasgow: Glasgow, William Hodge & Co. p. 72.
- ^ 480 minimimp/imp fl oz/438 gn/imp fl oz
- ISBN 978-0-87169-168-2.
- ^ A proclamation of Henry VIII, 5 November 1526. Proclamation 112 in Paul L. Hughes and James F. Larkin, editors. Tudor Royal Proclamations. Volume 1. New Haven: Yale University Press,1964.[1]
- ^ R. D. Connor and A. D. C. Simpson.Weights and Measures in Scotland. A European Perspective.National Museums of Scotland and Tuckwell Press, 2004, page 116, quoting from H. W. Chisholm, Seventh Annual Report of the Warden for the Standards..for 1872-73 (London, 1873), quoting from 1864 House of Commons Paper.[2]
- ^ "Entry 189985". OED Online. Oxford University Press. December 2011. Archived from the original on 25 June 2015. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
sterling, n.1 and adj.
- ISBN 978-0-470-65632-7.
- ^ ISBN 978-1-4471-1122-1.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-87169-168-2. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
External links
- English Customary Weights and Measures Archived 2008-07-24 at the Wayback Machine
- Jacques J. Proot's Anglo-Saxon weights & measures page. Internet Archive Wayback Machine
- Alexander Justice, "A General Discourse of the Weights and Measures" (London, 1707).