• Home
  • Featured
  • Archaeology

    In the Footsteps of the Missing Ninth Legion Hispana : Part One

    helemt

    Image Source : Istock

    The Ninth Legion ‘Hispana’, the

    • Archaeology News
    • Archaeology Videos
    • Archaeology Directory
    • HeritageDaily Tours
    • Archaeology Jokes
    • Spitfires in Burma – FREE EVENT
  • Palaeontology
  • Palaeoanthropology
  • Anthropology
  • Natural World
  • Heritage
  • About
    • Meet the Team
    • Our Partners
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Contact Us
  • Home
  • Featured
  • Archaeology
    • Archaeology News
    • Archaeology Videos
    • Archaeology Directory
    • HeritageDaily Tours
    • Archaeology Jokes
    • Spitfires in Burma – FREE EVENT
  • Palaeontology
  • Palaeoanthropology
  • Anthropology
  • Natural World
  • Heritage
  • About
    • Meet the Team
    • Our Partners
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Contact Us

Home HeritageThe world inside a 100-year-old Spanish globe

Previous Next

The world inside a 100-year-old Spanish globe

Globe
Posted by: HeritageDaily, January 2, 2013

Credit : University of Cambridge

Study of a mysterious 100-year-old interactive toy – perhaps the Wikipedia of its day – is painting a vivid picture of Spain’s path into the modern world.

Object Wh.5892 in the University’s Whipple Museum of the History of Science is something of an enigma. Clearly it’s a globe, but lift the northern hemisphere and you enter a startling world: volcanoes erupt, a mammoth lifts its tusks, dinosaurs clash. And amid these beautiful illustrations and encyclopaedic entries, a planetarium lies ready to re-enact the revolution of the planets around the sun at the turn of a cog.

The Spanish globe, unlike any currently known, has been shrouded in mystery: where, when and why was it made? Who would have used it? Most fundamentally, what is it – some kind of scientific instrument or a child’s toy?

-

Now, research by Seb Falk in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science has brought us closer to understanding the puzzling object, which is 25 cm in diameter. Remarkably, his work highlights how it symbolises a wave of change that swept 19th-century Spain into the modern world – from increasing trade in scientific instrumentation to a move of the education system towards interactive learning.

“Making a globe like this would have been technically difficult: apart from the construction of the globe from brass, wood and pasteboard, the inside of the sphere is hand-covered with encyclopaedic information designed expressly for the object and printed using the latest chromolithographic technology. All in all, it’s rather surprising that such an object was made in Spain, a country where there was no previous tradition of globe making.” By contrast, globe-making in other parts of Europe was thriving, with several makers exporting globes in Spanish to Spain.

Yet Falk believes that the balance of evidence weighs in favour of a Spanish provenance. “The prime meridian is shown running through Madrid, and the encyclopaedic entries are in Spanish.”

His research has led him to believe that it may have been made as a prototype for a globe-toy that was never mass produced and whose maker has long since disappeared from the annals of history. Today, no trace exists in the databases of Madrid’s National Museum of Science and Technology of the man who perhaps made the globe before marking it with his company stamp: Benjamín Tena of Valencia.

“International trade had expanded hugely in the late 19th century and there was a flourishing intra-European trade in scientific instruments and educational products. The globe’s maker may have imitated foreign models produced in Central Europe and then collaborated with an established publisher. Recent developments in printing technology were vital to the production of such a beautiful, brightly coloured toy.”

Dating the globe has been a remarkable exercise in detective work. Falk used cartographic evidence such as the presence of the border between Norway and Sweden (their union was dissolved in 1905), together with information in the encyclopaedic entries on the names of plants and animals and the number of moons for each planet, and even the use of accents in Spanish words that lost them suddenly in the first decade of the 20th century. All point towards the maker having made the globe around 1907.

This was a crucial time in Spain, as Falk explained: “The 19th century had seen civil wars and coups with numerous failed attempts at economic reform and industrialisation. A vociferous press argued that Spain’s problems resulted from inadequacies in the education system.”

As a result, said Falk, Spanish educational practices began moving away from passive learning with a master lecturing on his dais, towards flexible, small-group education with children learning from tactile experiences and experimentation – for which the globe would have been perfect. “Although what one might ordinarily want to do with a globe – spin it – is almost impossible, it is clearly intended to be touched. The planetarium is sized to fit a child’s hand, with instructions designed to be read aloud: ‘if we place the little lunar globe in a straight line between the earth and the sun, the moon will block the sun’s light…. we thus have a solar eclipse.’”

Perhaps the most graphic testimony of its having being used by a child is its ‘injury’. “On one of the planets in the planetarium, a child has written ‘SOLO’. Its meaning is not clear – the child may have confused the planet with the sun – but it reminds us that these museum objects were once much loved toys, thrilling and exciting the children who used them.”

Why only one ‘encyglobedia’, as Falk describes it, exists is not known, although Falk hazards a guess that its complexity may have made it too pricey for its most obvious market in schools, or for a family home-tutoring their children.

Today, the globe-toy stands on display alongside the newly re-housed collection of globes at the Whipple: blank slate globes for children and teachers to draw the world in chalk, lunar globes showing the craters of the moon, pocket-sized and portable ‘umbrella’ globes, and many other examples of our abiding fascination with imagining the world in three dimensions.

Director and Curator of the Whipple Museum, Professor Liba Taub, whom Falk worked with, sees the wider collection at the Museum as vitally important in a working research and teaching department: “I work to foster a mutually beneficial relationship between the Museum and the Department, and am always happy when students are inspired by an object from the Whipple collection. Students have the opportunity to develop their research skills and interests in museum work, and the Museum and its visitors benefit from the increased knowledge and understanding gained through their endeavours.”

For Falk, the fascination of this particular globe has been the tantalising opportunity to help to unravel its mystery. But it has also been the chance to see at first-hand how the study of ‘things’ – the times and places that objects were made and used, played with and discarded – can tell us about ourselves and the society around us.

“In this one object we can see the intersection between the popularisation of science, printing technology, education, international trade and Spanish political developments. That’s what object studies have the power to do.”

The Whipple Museum holds an internationally important collection of scientific instruments and models, dating from the Middle Ages to the present (www.hps.cam.ac.uk/whipple/).

Contributing Source : University of Cambridge

HeritageDaily : Archaeology News : Archaeology Press Releases

Share!
Tweet

HeritageDaily

About the author

Heritage Daily is an independent online archaeology magazine, dedicated to the heritage and historical sector. We identified the need for a central resource offering the latest archaeological news, journals, articles and press releases.

Related Posts

234323

Korean War Remembered

The MOD and Westminster Abbey will formally mark the bravery and dedication of those who fought ...
4212

Light cast on lifestyle and diet of first New Zealanders

A University of Otago-led multidisciplinary team of scientists have shed new light on the diet, ...
111221

Scientists confirm that the Justinianic Plague was caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis

Ancient DNA analyses of skeletal remains of plague victims from the 6th century AD provide info ...
Canadian lynx

Museum find proves exotic ‘big cat’ prowled British countryside a century ago

The rediscovery of a mystery animal in a museum's underground storeroom proves that a non-nativ ...
311

First World War soldiers finally laid to rest

The remains of 2 First World War soldiers have finally been laid to rest nearly 100 years after ...
meteor1

A Chinook helicopter airlifted one of the RAF’s historic aircraft to a new jet museum

A Chinook helicopter airlifted one of the RAF's historic aircraft to a new jet museum

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

HeritageDaily

Heritage Daily is an independent online academic magazine, dedicated to the heritage and history of the world.

We identified the need for a central resource offering the latest news in archaeology, palaeontology and associated disciplines.

Popular
Recent
Comments
  • Stonehenge - Salisbury Plain Image Source: Flickr : Creative Commons License (See Photo Gallery for Source Link)

    Stonehenge: geologists overturn standing theory about the standing stone

    April 7, 2011
    Paranthropus Boisei : Image Source : Wiki Commons

    New technologies challenge old ideas about early hominid diets

    October 14, 2011
    HMS VICTORY 1744 WIKI COMMONS

    Odyssey Marine and Cameron Peer Out of Control on HMS Victory

    August 3, 2012
    Roman Londinium

    The Myth of Roman Britain? – Part One

    July 19, 2012
    HMS VICTORY 1744 WIKI COMMONS

    MOD admit – we know charity can’t protect HMS Victory wreck

    July 16, 2012
  • 54321341

    New discovery of ancient diet shatters conventiona ...

    May 17, 2013
    nation1

    Possessing the Past: The use and abuse of archaeol ...

    May 17, 2013
    234323

    Korean War Remembered

    May 17, 2013
    9876576

    The Crown Estate renews £60K funding pledge to sup ...

    May 17, 2013
    4321231

    DNA analysis unearths origins of Minoans, the firs ...

    May 16, 2013
  • Hi James, I'm wondering, who are you addres ...

    May 7, 2013

    Some excellent points in the article but I have ju ...

    April 18, 2013

    The Roman Empire is just another episode of human ...

    April 18, 2013

    When did Ireland move thousands of miles to the we ...

    April 18, 2013

    WOW great, every day; many scientist searching for ...

    April 13, 2013

Latest News

Binghamton researcher studies oldest fossil hominin ear bones ever recovered

Binghamton researcher studies oldest fossil hominin ear bones ever recovered

May 14th, 2013

Paranthropus Robustus : Wiki Commons Recently published paper indicates discovery could yield imp[...]

Baylor University Researcher Finds Earliest Archaeological Evidence of Human Ancestors Hunting and Scavenging

Baylor University Researcher Finds Earliest Archaeological Evidence of Human Ancestors Hunting and Scavenging

May 14th, 2013

Aerial view of the archaeological site Kanjera South, Kenya. Photo courtesy of Thomas Plummer. A re[...]

Possessing the Past: The use and abuse of archaeology in building nation-states

Possessing the Past: The use and abuse of archaeology in building nation-states

May 17th, 2013

The Ratification of the Treaty of Munster, Gerard Ter Borch (1648) : Wiki Commons Historical arte[...]

The Crown Estate renews £60K funding pledge to support seabed heritage

The Crown Estate renews £60K funding pledge to support seabed heritage

May 17th, 2013

Image Credit : WikiPedia An archaeological reporting scheme which helps the marine aggregate indust[...]

Fossil saveUniversity of Southamptond from mule track revolutionizes understanding of ancient dolphin-like marine reptile

Fossil saveUniversity of Southamptond from mule track revolutionizes understanding of ancient dolphin-like marine reptile

May 16th, 2013

This is Malawania, the Jurassic-style Cretaceous ichthyosaur from Iraq. : WikiPedia An internationa[...]

Ancient creature discovered with 'scissor hand-like' claws

Ancient creature discovered with 'scissor hand-like' claws

May 16th, 2013

Kooteninchela Deppi : ICL A scientist has discovered an ancient extinct creature with 'scissor hand[...]

Light cast on lifestyle and diet of first New Zealanders

Light cast on lifestyle and diet of first New Zealanders

May 16th, 2013

A University of Otago-led multidisciplinary team of scientists have shed new light on the diet, life[...]

Study provides insight into nesting behavior of dinosaurs

Study provides insight into nesting behavior of dinosaurs

May 16th, 2013

A clutch of Troodon formosus eggs partly encased in matrix. Wiki Commons Both moms and dads helped [...]

New discovery of ancient diet shatters conventional ideas of how agriculture emerged

New discovery of ancient diet shatters conventional ideas of how agriculture emerged

May 17th, 2013

Credit: Dr. Huw Barton Use of new analysis techniques provides food for thought about how people li[...]

Korean War Remembered

Korean War Remembered

May 17th, 2013

Royal Navy Colossus Class light fleet aircraft carrier HMS Ocean (R68) at Sasebo in Japan during the[...]

Archaeology News

Social

1797
followers
14257
fans

Latest Tweets

  • HeritageDaily: Villagers installing a water pipe discover 1,000 year old ancient ball game statue in Mexico http://t.co/YCPOhU2hxb
  • HeritageDaily: Dredging Today – Australia: Archaeological Dig to Uncover Old Southport Sea Wall http://t.co/xAekVyDi8c
  • HeritageDaily: Video special: Beneath York Minster - General news - Yorkshire Post http://t.co/eUBqWax95k

Archaeology Pins

Roman Walls LondiniuStrolling the LocksReaching new Heights
On Histories TrailWalking on the Edge.3 men and a bike...
Never a height to hiBronze Shield in theLondon old and new i
Follow Me on Pinterest More Pins

Newsletter

Please enter your email address

Archive

Translate

EnglishFrenchGermanItalianPortugueseRussianSpanish
Copyright © 2013 Powered by HeritageMedia.