Men and measures : a history of weights and measures, ancient and modern / by Edward Nicholson.
- Nicholson, Edward
- Date:
- 1912
Licence: In copyright
Credit: Men and measures : a history of weights and measures, ancient and modern / by Edward Nicholson. Source: Wellcome Collection.
78/338 page 60
![King David I of Scotland (c. 1150) is credited with the pronouncement that the Scots inch was to be the mean measure of ‘ the thowmys of iij men, that is to say an mekill man and a man of messurabil statur and of a lytell man. The thoums are to be messurit at the rut of the nayll.’ But no more in Scotland than in England, or elsewhere, has the inch ever been anything but a division of the foot. A standard of the English foot was fixed in Old St. Paul’s Church, London, and was known as Paul’s foot, all measures being referred to the standard ‘ qui insculpitur super basim columpnse in ecclesia Sancti Pauli.’ In 1273 a deed gave the measurement of land ‘ according to the iron ell [yard] of the King’s palace.’ The present standard yard is a bronze bar kept in London, the length of which agrees exactly with the yard, still extant, of Tudor times. A set of standard measures of length is fixed along the base of the northern wall of Trafalgar Square,1 and another set is in the flooring of the Guildhall. Sets are also fixed to public buildings in several chief towns of the United Kingdom. As metal rods vary in length according to tempera- ture, comparisons with a standard measure should be made at the normal temperature of 62°. But there is 1 The Standards Commission in 1870 advised that the public standards of length should be placed so as to be readily accessible to the public without their use ‘ being disturbed by passers or idle gazers.’ Anyone who has tried to get access to those in Trafalgar Square may regret that there seems to be no provision made against their site being made the usual lounge of often very objectionable persons.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b24870146_0078.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


