• the aeolipile

    From Arthur Neuendorffer@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 12 14:37:15 2021
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    The book About automata by Hero of Alexandria (1589 edition)

    Pneumatica (Πνευματικά), a description of machines working on air, steam or water pressure, including the hydraulis or water organ. The Pneumatica, in two books, describes a menagerie of mechanical devices, or “toys”: singing birds, puppets,
    coin-operated machines, a fire engine, a water organ, and his most famous invention, the aeolipile, the first steam-powered engine.

    Automata, a description of machines which enable wonders in banquets and possibly also theatrical contexts by mechanical or pneumatical means (e.g. automatic opening or closing of temple doors, statues that pour wine and milk, etc.)[24]
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    <<In Heron of Alexandria's numerous surviving writings are designs for automata—machines operated by mechanical or pneumatic means. These included devices for temples to instill faith by deceiving believers with "magical acts of the gods," for
    theatrical spectacles, and machines like a statue that poured wine. Among his inventions were:

    ♦ A windwheel operating a pipe organ—the first instance of wind powering a machine.

    ♦ The first automatic vending machine. When a coin was introduced through a slot on the top of the machine, a set amount of holy water was dispensed. When the coin was deposited, it fell upon a pan attached to a lever. The lever opened up a valve which
    let some water flow out. The pan continued to tilt with the weight of the coin until the coin fell off, at which point a counter-weight would snap the lever back up and turn off the valve.

    ♦ Mechanisms for the Greek theater, including an entirely mechanical puppet play almost ten minutes in length, powered by a binary-like system of ropes, knots, and simple machines operated by a rotating cylindrical cogwheel. The sound of thunder was
    produced by the mechanically-timed dropping of metal balls onto a hidden drum.

    More illustrated technical treatises by Heron survived than those of any other writer from the ancient world. His Pneumatica, which described a series of apparatus for natural magic or parlor magic, was definitely the most widely read of his works during
    the Middle Ages; more than 100 manuscripts of it survived. However, the earliest surviving copy of this text, Codex Gr. 516 in the Bibliotheca Marciana in Venice, dates from about the thirteenth century— a later date than one might expect. Conversely,
    the complete text of Heron's other widely known work, the Mechanica, survived through only a single Arabic translation made by Kosta ben Luka between 862 and 866 CE. This manuscript is preserved in Leiden University Library (cod. 51).

    The first publication in print of any of Heron's works appeared as a paraphrase of the early pages of the Pneumatica in the encyclopedic De expetendis et fugiendis rebusOffsite Link of humanist Giorgio VallaOffsite Link published in Venice the year after
    Valla's death, in 1501. The first printed edition of the complete text of the Pneumatica was the Latin translation from the Greek by mathematician and humanist Federico CommandinoOffsite Link published as Heronis Alexandrini spiritualium liberOffsite
    Link (1575). The second work of Heron to be published in print was the translation from the Greek into Italian of Heron's work on automata by Commandino's pupil, the scientist and writer Bernardino BaldiOffsite Link, De gli automati, ouero machine se
    mouenti, libri dueOffsite Link, first issued from Venice in 1589. Heron's Mechanica, a textbook for architects, engineers, builders and contractors, concerned the theoretical knowledge and practical skills necessary for an architect. It's complete text
    was first published in print in French translation from the Arabic as Les méchaniques ou l'élévateur de Héron d'AlexandrieOffsite Link publiées spour la première foi sur la version Arabe de Qostà ibn Lûqà et traduites en Français par M. le
    Baron Carra de Vaux. (1893).>> ------------------------------------------------------------

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