Renaissance technology

Renaissance technology was the set of European artifacts and inventions which spread through the Renaissance period, roughly the 14th century through the 16th century. The era is marked by profound technical advancements such as the printing press, linear perspective in drawing, patent law, double shell domes and bastion fortresses. Sketchbooks from artisans of the period (Taccola and Leonardo da Vinci, for example) give a deep insight into the mechanical technology then known and applied.

Renaissance science spawned the Scientific Revolution; science and technology began a cycle of mutual advancement.

Renaissance technology

Some important Renaissance technologies, including both innovations and improvements on existing techniques:

Late 14th century

Some of the technologies were the arquebus and the musket.

15th century

The technologies that developed in Europe during the second half of the 15th century were commonly associated by authorities of the time with a key theme in Renaissance thought: the rivalry of the Moderns and the Ancients. Three inventions in particular — the printing press, firearms, and the nautical compass — were indeed seen as evidence that the Moderns could not only compete with the Ancients, but had surpassed them, for these three inventions allowed modern people to communicate, exercise power, and finally travel at distances unimaginable in earlier times.[1]

Water-raising pump powered by crank and connecting rod mechanism (Georg Andreas Böckler, 1661)

Crank and connecting rod

The crank and connecting rod mechanism which converts circular into reciprocal motion is of utmost importance for the mechanization of work processes; it is first attested for Roman water-powered sawmills.[2] During the Renaissance, its use is greatly diversified and mechanically refined; now connecting-rods are also applied to double compound cranks, while the flywheel is employed to get these cranks over the 'dead-spot'.[3] Early evidence of such machines appears, among other things, in the works of the 15th-century engineers Anonymous of the Hussite Wars and Taccola.[4] From then on, cranks and connecting rods become an integral part of machine design and are applied in ever more elaborate ways: Agostino Ramelli's The Diverse and Artifactitious Machines of 1588 depicts eighteen different applications, a number which rises in the 17th-century Theatrum Machinarum Novum by Georg Andreas Böckler to forty-five.[5]

Printing press

Two printers operating a Gutenberg-style printing press (1568). Such presses could make around 3,600 impressions per workday.[6]

The introduction of the mechanical movable type printing press by the German goldsmith Johannes Gutenberg (1398–1468) is widely regarded as the single most important event of the second millennium,[7] and is one of the defining moments of the Renaissance. The Printing Revolution which it sparks throughout Europe works as a modern "agent of change" in the transformation of medieval society.

The mechanical device consists of a screw press modified for printing purposes which can produce 3,600 pages per workday,[6] allowing the mass production of printed books on a proto-industrial scale. By the start of the 16th century, printing presses are operating in over 200 cities in a dozen European countries, producing more than twenty million volumes.[8] By 1600, their output had risen tenfold to an estimated 150 to 200 million copies, while Gutenberg book printing spread from Europe further afield.[8]

The relatively free flow of information transcends borders and induced a sharp rise in Renaissance literacy, learning and education; the circulation of (revolutionary) ideas among the rising middle classes, but also the peasants, threatens the traditional power monopoly of the ruling nobility and is a key factor in the rapid spread of the Protestant Reformation. The dawn of the Gutenberg Galaxy, the era of mass communication, is instrumental in fostering the gradual democratization of knowledge which sees for the first time modern media phenomena such as the press or bestsellers emerging.[9] The prized incunables, which are testimony to the aesthetic taste and high proficient competence of Renaissance book printers, are one lasting legacy of the 15th century.

Veranzio's 1595 parachute design titled "Flying Man"

Parachute

The earliest known parachute design appears in an anonymous manuscript from 1470s Renaissance Italy;[10] it depicts a free-hanging man clutching a crossbar frame attached to a conical canopy.[11] As a safety measure, four straps run from the ends of the rods to a waist belt. Around 1485, a more advanced parachute was sketched by the polymath Leonardo da Vinci in his Codex Atlanticus (fol. 381v), which he scales in a more favorable proportion to the weight of the jumper.[11] Leonardo's canopy was held open by a square wooden frame, altering the shape of the parachute from conical to pyramidal.[12] The Venetian inventor Fausto Veranzio (1551–1617) modifies da Vinci's parachute sketch by keeping the square frame, but replacing the canopy with a bulging sail-like piece of cloth. This he realized decelerates the fall more effectively.[12] Claims[13] that Veranzio successfully tested his parachute design in 1617 by jumping from a tower in Venice cannot be substantiated; since he was around 65 years old at the time.

Mariner's astrolabe

The earliest recorded uses of the astrolabe for navigational purposes are by the Portuguese explorers Diogo de Azambuja (1481), Bartholomew Diaz (1487/88) and Vasco da Gama (1497–98) during their sea voyages around Africa.[14]

Dry dock

While dry docks were already known in Hellenistic shipbuilding,[15] these facilities were reintroduced in 1495/96, when Henry VII of England ordered one to be built at the Portsmouth navy base.[16]

16th century

Floating dock

Floating dock at Venice (1560)

The earliest known description of a floating dock comes from a small Italian book printed in Venice in 1560, titled Descrittione dell'artifitiosa machina. In the booklet, an unknown author asks for the privilege of using a new method for the salvaging of a grounded ship and then proceeds to describe and illustrate his approach. The included woodcut shows a ship flanked by two large floating trestles, forming a roof above the vessel. The ship is pulled in an upright position by a number of ropes attached to the superstructure.[17]

Relocation of the Vatican Obelisk, Rome, by Domenico Fontana (1586)

Lifting tower

A lifting tower was used to great effect by Domenico Fontana to relocate the monolithic Vatican obelisk in Rome.[18] Its weight of 361 t was far greater than any of the blocks the Romans are known to have lifted by cranes.[18][A 1]

Mining, machinery and chemistry A standard reference for the state of mechanical arts during the Renaissance is given in the mining engineering treatise De re metallica (1556), which also contains sections on geology, mining and chemistry. De re metallica was the standard chemistry reference for the next 180 years.

Early 17th century

Newspaper

Title page of the Relation (1609), the earliest newspaper[19]

The newspaper is an application of the printing press from which the press derives its name.[20] The 16th century sees a rising demand for up-to-date information which can not be covered effectively by the circulating hand-written newssheets. For "gaining time" from the slow copying process, Johann Carolus of Strassburg is the first to publish his German-language Relation by using a printing press (1605).[21] In rapid succession, further German newspapers are established in Wolfenbüttel (Avisa Relation oder Zeitung), Basel, Frankfurt and Berlin.[21] From 1618 onwards, enterprising Dutch printers take up the practice and begin to provide the English and French market with translated news.[21] By the mid-17th century it is estimated that political newspapers which enjoyed the widest popularity reach up to 250,000 readers in the Holy Roman Empire, around one quarter of the literate population.[22]

Air-gun

In 1607 Bartolomeo Crescentio described an air gun equipped with a powerful spiral spring, a device so complex that it must have had predecessors.[original research?] In 1610 Mersenne spoke in detail of "sclopeti pneumatici constructio", and four years later Wilkins wrote enthusiastically of "that late ingenious invention the wind-gun" as being "almost equall to our powder-guns". In the 1650s Otto von Guericke, famed for his experiments with vacua and pressures, built the Madeburger Windbuchse, one of the technical wonders of its time.[citation needed]

Tools, devices, work processes

15th century

Cranked Archimedes' screw

The German engineer Konrad Kyeser equips in his Bellifortis (1405) the Archimedes' screw with a crank mechanism which soon replaces the ancient practice of working the pipe by treading.[23]

Cranked reel

In the textile industry, cranked reels for winding skeins of yarn were introduced in the early 15th century.[24]

Brace

The earliest carpenter's braces equipped with a U-shaped grip, that is with a compound crank, appears between 1420 and 1430 in Flanders.[3]

Cranked well-hoist

The earliest evidence for the fitting of a well-hoist with cranks is found in a miniature of c. 1425 in the German Hausbuch of the Mendel Foundation.[25]

Paddle wheel boat powered by crank and connecting rod mechanism

While paddle wheel boats powered by manually turned crankshafts were already conceived of by earlier writers such as Guido da Vigevano and the Anonymous Author of the Hussite Wars,[26] the Italian Roberto Valturio much improves on the design in 1463 by devising a boat with five sets of parallel cranks which are all joined to a single power source by one connecting rod; the idea is also taken up by his compatriot Francesco di Giorgio.[27]

Rotary grindstone with treadle

Evidence for rotary grindstones operated by a crank handle goes back to the Carolingian Utrecht Psalter.[28] Around 1480, the crank mechanism is further mechanized by adding a treadle.[29]

Geared hand-mill

The geared hand-mill, operated either with one or two cranks, appears in the 15th century.[24]

16th century

German grenade muskets from the 16th century (the two upper ones)

Grenade musket

Two 16th-century German grenade muskets working with a wheellock mechanism are on display in the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich.[30]

Technical drawings of artist-engineers

The revived scientific spirit of the age can perhaps be best exemplified by the voluminous corpus of technical drawings which the artist-engineers left behind, reflecting the wide variety of interests the Renaissance homo universalis pursued. The establishment of the laws of linear perspective by Brunelleschi gave his successors, such as Taccola, Francesco di Giorgio Martini and Leonardo da Vinci, a powerful instrument to depict mechanical devices for the first time in a realistic manner. The extant sketch books give modern historians of science invaluable insights into the standards of technology of the time. Renaissance engineers showed a strong proclivity to experimental study, drawing a variety of technical devices, many of which appeared for the first time in history on paper.

However, these designs were not always intended to be put into practice, and often practical limitations impeded the application of the revolutionary designs. For example, da Vinci's ideas on the conical parachute or the winged flying machine were only applied much later. While earlier scholars showed a tendency to attribute inventions based on their first pictorial appearance to individual Renaissance engineers, modern scholarship is more prone to view the devices as products of a technical evolution which often went back to the Middle Ages.

Technology Date Author Treatise Comment
Pile driver 1475[31] Francesco di Giorgio Martini Trattato di Architectura Drawing of such a device whose principle must be according to the Brazilian historian of technology Ladislao Reti "considered original with Franceso".[32]
Centrifugal pump 1475[31] Francesco di Giorgio Martini Trattato di Architectura Water or mud-lifting machine "that must be characterized as the prototype of the centrifugal pump".[31]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 53.3 t at Trajan's Column (Lancaster 1999, p. 426); 60−100 t at the Jupiter temple of Baalbek (Coulton 1974, p. 16).

Footnotes

  1. ^ Boruchoff 2012, 133-163.
  2. ^ Ritti, Grewe & Kessener 2007, p. 161
  3. ^ a b White 1962, p. 112
  4. ^ White 1962, p. 113
  5. ^ White 1962, p. 172
  6. ^ a b Wolf 1974, pp. 67f
  7. ^ See People of the Millenium for an overview of the wide acclaim. In 1999, the A&E Network ranked Gutenberg no. 1 on their "People of the Millennium" countdown. In 1997, Time–Life magazine picked Gutenberg's invention as the most important of the second millennium Archived 2010-03-10 at the Wayback Machine; the same did four prominent US journalists in their 1998 resume 1,000 Years, 1,000 People: Ranking The Men and Women Who Shaped The Millennium. The Johann Gutenberg entry of the Catholic Encyclopedia describes his invention as having made a practically unparalleled cultural impact in the Christian era.
  8. ^ a b Febvre, Lucien; Martin, Henri-Jean (1976): "The Coming of the Book: The Impact of Printing 1450–1800", London: New Left Books, quoted in: Anderson, Benedict: "Comunidades Imaginadas. Reflexiones sobre el origen y la difusión del nacionalismo", Fondo de cultura económica, Mexico 1993, ISBN 978-968-16-3867-2, pp. 58f
  9. ^ McLuhan 1962; Eisenstein 1980; Febvre & Martin 1997; Man 2002
  10. ^ British Library Add MS 34113, folio 200v
  11. ^ a b White 1968, pp. 462f
  12. ^ a b White 1968, p. 465
  13. ^ John Wilkins (1614–1672): Mathematical Magic of the Wonders that may be Performed by Mechanical Geometry, part I: Concerning Mechanical Powers Motion, part II, Dead-loss or Mechanical Motions, published in London in 1648
  14. ^ Stimson 1985, p. 576
  15. ^ Wikander 2000, pp. 326−328
  16. ^ Sarton 1946, p. 153
  17. ^ Sarton 1946, pp. 153f.
  18. ^ a b Lancaster 1999, p. 428
  19. ^ World Association of Newspapers: "Newspapers: 400 Years Young!"; Weber 2006, p. 396
  20. ^ Weber 2006, p. 387
  21. ^ a b c Weber 2006, p. 396f
  22. ^ Weber 2006, p. 399
  23. ^ White 1962, pp. 105, 111, 168
  24. ^ a b White 1962, p. 111
  25. ^ White 1962, p. 167; Hall 1979, p. 52
  26. ^ Hall 1979, pp. 80f.
  27. ^ White 1962, p. 114
  28. ^ White 1962, p. 110
  29. ^ White 1962, p. 167
  30. ^ Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, München, Inv. nos. W 1450, W 1451
  31. ^ a b c Ladislao Reti, "Francesco di Giorgio Martini's Treatise on Engineering and Its Plagiarists", Technology and Culture, Vol. 4, No. 3. (Summer, 1963), pp. 287-298 (290)
  32. ^ Ladislao Reti, "Francesco di Giorgio Martini's Treatise on Engineering and Its Plagiarists", Technology and Culture, Vol. 4, No. 3. (Summer, 1963), pp. 287-298 (297f)

References

Read other articles:

CBeebiesJenisJaringan BBCNegara InggrisWilayah siaranSeluruh DuniaPemilikBBCSitus webwww.bbc.co.uk/cbeebies CBeebies adalah stasiun TV BBC untuk anak-anak di bawah 6 tahun. CBeebies sebenarnya masuk dalam saluran internasional BBC tetapi CBeebies juga masuk dalam jajaran Televisi BBC di Inggris. Anda yang tinggal di Indonesia bisa menonton saluran ini lewat Indovision.beberapa bulan ini juga bisa dinikmati melalui satelit measat dengan receiver yang bisa membuka acakan powervu Program CB...

 

 

City in Georgia, United StatesPlains, GeorgiaCityPlains downtown storefronts in 2008 SealMotto: Home of the 39th President of the United States[1]Location in Sumter County, GeorgiaPlainsLocation of PlainsShow map of GeorgiaPlainsPlains (the United States)Show map of the United StatesCoordinates: 32°2′1″N 84°23′36″W / 32.03361°N 84.39333°W / 32.03361; -84.39333CountryUnited StatesStateGeorgiaCountySumterArea[2] • Total0.81&#...

 

 

Not to be confused with Fuyu, Jilin. County in Hoseo, South KoreaBuyeo 부여군CountyKorean transcription(s) • Hangul부여군 • Hanja扶餘郡 • Revised RomanizationBuyeo-gun • McCune-ReischauerPuyŏ-gun FlagEmblem of BuyeoLocation in South KoreaCountry South KoreaRegionHoseoAdministrative divisions1 eup, 15 myeonArea • Total624.58 km2 (241.15 sq mi)Population (2000) • Total95,213 •&...

Period of Japanese history, 1333–1336 Kenmu Restoration建武の新政 Kenmu no shinsei1333–1336 Flag Imperial Seal CapitalHeian-kyōCommon languagesLate Middle JapaneseReligion Shinbutsu-shūgōGovernmentAbsolute monarchyEmperor • 1318–1339 Go-Daigo Shōgun • 1333 Moriyoshi• 1335–1336 Narinaga History • Genkō War begins 1333• Siege of Kamakura May 18, 1333• Ashikaga Takauji captures Kyoto February 23 1336 CurrencyRyō Pre...

 

 

Armour made of overlapping scales, without a solid backing Qin dynasty Terracotta Army soldier wearing lamellar armour Lamellar armour is a type of body armour, made from small rectangular plates (scales or lamellae) of iron or steel, leather (rawhide), bone, or bronze laced into horizontal rows. Lamellar armour was used over a wide range of time periods in Central Asia, Eastern Asia (especially in China, Japan, Mongolia, and Tibet), Western Asia, and Eastern Europe. The earliest evidence for...

 

 

This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This biographical article is written like a résumé. Please help improve it by revising it to be neutral and encyclopedic. (November 2019)This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be...

Western segment of Bolshaya Nikitskaya, looking east from Embassy of Spain, with Great Ascension church in the distance Bolshaya Nikitskaya Street (Russian: Большая Никитская улица, Nikitskaya Ulitsa) is a radial street that runs west from Mokhovaya Street to Garden Ring in Moscow, between Vozdvizhenka Street (south) and Tverskaya Street (north). Central, eastern part of the street is notable for its educational institutions (old Moscow State University and Moscow Conserv...

 

 

American college basketball season 2016–17 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketballC-USA regular season & tournament championsChallenge in Music City championsNCAA tournament, Second RoundConferenceConference USARecord31–5 (17–1 C-USA)Head coachKermit Davis (15th season)Assistant coaches Greg Grensing Win Case Ronnie Hamilton Home arenaMurphy CenterSeasons← 2015–162017–18 → 2016–17 Conference USA men's basketball standings vte Conf Overall...

 

 

Nicolai Copernici Torinensis De revolutionibus orbium coelestium, Libri VI (Sur les révolutions des orbes célestes, en six livres, par Nicolas Copernic de Toruń), édition originale de 1543 imprimée à Nuremberg par Johann Petreius (fac simile accessible en cliquant sur l'image). De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (Des révolutions des orbes célestes ou des sphères célestes) qui fut imprimé pour la première fois en 1543 à Nuremberg[1], est l'œuvre de l'astronome polonais Nicolas ...

Radio station in Fremont, NebraskaKHUBFremont, NebraskaBroadcast areaFremont, NebraskaFrequency1340 kHzBrandingThe Big DogProgrammingFormatCountryAffiliationsABC Radio, Salem Communications, Westwood OneOwnershipOwnerSteven W. Seline(Walnut Radio, LLC)Sister stationsKFMTHistoryFirst air dateDecember 22, 1939[1]Former call signsKORN (1939–1949)KFGT (1949–1958)Technical informationFacility ID34550ClassCPower500 watts (day)250 watts (night)Transmitter coordinates41°25′58.00″N 96...

 

 

European Union department This article is part of a series onPolitics of the European Union Member states (27) Austria Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Ireland Italy Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Malta Netherlands Poland Portugal Romania Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden Candidate countries Albania...

 

 

Lightweight, washable clothing worn by hospital staff or other medical personnel For other uses, see Scrub. This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Scrubs clothing – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message) A light blue set of scrubs. S...

Questa voce sull'argomento contee della Virginia è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Contea di RoanokeconteaLocalizzazioneStato Stati Uniti Stato federato Virginia AmministrazioneCapoluogoSalem Data di istituzione1830 TerritorioCoordinatedel capoluogo37°16′12″N 80°04′48″W37°16′12″N, 80°04′48″W (Contea di Roanoke) Superficie650 km² Abitanti85 778 (2000) Densità131,97 ab./km² Altre informazioniFuso...

 

 

Overview of solar power in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania Solar panels in Myerstown. Solar power in Pennsylvania currently provides less than 1% of the state's electricity, but there are many policies in place to regulate and incentivize its use. Pennsylvania mandates the use of solar power through a renewable portfolio standard, which requires a percentage of electricity from each providers to come from solar, and net metering, which compensates small-scale solar generation through net meter...

 

 

1947 raft journey from South America to Polynesia For other uses of Kon-Tiki, see Kontiki (disambiguation). Kon-Tiki expeditionThe Kon-Tiki raft at the Kon-Tiki Museum, Oslo The Kon-Tiki expedition was a 1947 journey by raft across the Pacific Ocean from South America to the Polynesian islands, led by Norwegian explorer and writer Thor Heyerdahl. The raft was named Kon-Tiki after the Inca god Viracocha, for whom Kon-Tiki was said to be an old name. Heyerdal's book on the expedition was entitl...

MS Braemar di Nieuwe Waterweg, Belanda, 2017. Sejarah Bahama Nama 1993–1997: Crown Dynasty 1997–1997: Crown Majesty 1997–1999: Norwegian Dynasty 1999–2001: Crown Dynasty sejak 2001: Braemar Operator 1993–1993: Crown Cruise Line 1993–1997: Cunard Line 1997–1997: Majesty Cruise Line 1997–1999: Norwegian Cruise Line 1999–2001: Commodore Cruise Line sejak 2001: Fred Olsen Cruises Registrasi 1993–: Kota Panama,  Panama sejak 2003: Nassau,  Bahama Pembangun Union Nava...

 

 

  المجموعة الاقتصادية الأوروآسيوية المجموعة الاقتصادية الأوروآسيوية‌ الخريطة المقر الرئيسي موسكو تاريخ التأسيس 10 أكتوبر 2000 مكان التأسيس أستانا  تاريخ الحل 1 يناير 2015 النوع منظمة دولية حكومية العضوية  بيلاروس كازاخستان قرغيزستان روسيا طاجيكستان أو�...

 

 

Pour les articles homonymes, voir Avon. Avon L'hôtel de ville. Blason Logo Administration Pays France Région Île-de-France Département Seine-et-Marne Arrondissement Fontainebleau Intercommunalité Communauté d'agglomération du Pays de Fontainebleau Maire Mandat Marie-Charlotte Nouhaud (LR) 2020-2026 Code postal 77210 Code commune 77014 Démographie Gentilé Avonnais Populationmunicipale 13 660 hab. (2021 ) Densité 3 567 hab./km2 Géographie Coordonnées 48° 2...

Sing 2Poster teaserSutradaraGarth JenningsProduserChris MeledandriJanet HealyDitulis olehGarth JenningsBerdasarkanKarakteroleh Garth JenningsPemeranMatthew McConaugheyReese WitherspoonScarlett JohanssonTaron EgertonTori KellyNick KrollBobby CannavaleHalseyPharrell WilliamsLetitia WrightEric AndreChelsea PerettiBonoPerusahaanproduksiIlluminationDistributorUniversal PicturesTanggal rilis 22 Desember 2021 (2021-12-22) (Amerika Serikat) NegaraAmerika SerikatBahasaInggrisSing 2 adalah fil...

 

 

ХуторКрепацкий 50°32′16″ с. ш. 37°24′41″ в. д.HGЯO Страна  Россия Субъект Федерации Белгородская область Городской округ Шебекинский История и география Высота центра 138 м Часовой пояс UTC+3:00 Население Население ↘89[1] человек (2010) Цифровые идентификаторы Поч�...