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The Great Britain Guide

Memorials & monuments · West Midlands

Sundial

Also known as: Deial haul, Clog gréine, Uaireadair-grèine

Free admission

Sundial is a memorial in the United Kingdom.

Old Milestone - geograph.org.uk - 5381027

Keith Evans — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
15 min–45 min
Nearest railway station
Milton Keynes Central · 1.6 km
  • Free entry
  • Dog-friendly

About

Sundial is a public memorial in the West Midlands, recording local sacrifice and named in the parish register of war and civic monuments. It sits within the Milton Keynes Central parliamentary constituency. The nearest railway station is Milton Keynes Central, about 1.6 km away. Postcode area MK5.

Photo gallery

From the Wikipedia article

A sundial is a horological device that tells the time of day (referred to as civil time in modern usage) when direct sunlight shines by the apparent position of the Sun in the sky. In the narrowest sense of the word, it consists of a flat plate (the dial) and a gnomon, which casts a shadow onto the dial. As the Sun appears to move through the sky, the shadow aligns with different hour-lines, which are marked on the dial to indicate the time of day. The style is the time-telling edge of the gnomon, though a single point or nodus may be used. The gnomon casts a broad shadow; the shadow of the style shows the time. The gnomon may be a rod, wire, or elaborately decorated metal casting. The style must be parallel to the axis of the Earth's rotation for the sundial to be accurate throughout the year. The style's angle from horizontal is equal to the sundial's geographical latitude. The term sundial can refer to any device that uses the Sun's altitude or azimuth (or both) to show the time. Sundials are valued as decorative objects, metaphors, and objects of intrigue and mathematical study. The passing of time can be observed by placing a stick in the sand or a nail in a board and placing markers at the edge of a shadow or outlining a shadow at intervals. It is common for inexpensive, mass-produced decorative sundials to have incorrectly aligned gnomons, shadow lengths, and hour-lines, which cannot be adjusted to tell the correct time.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

The earliest sundials known from the archaeological record are shadow clocks (1500 BC or BCE) from ancient Egyptian astronomy and Babylonian astronomy. By 240 BC, Eratosthenes had estimated the circumference of the world using an obelisk and a water well and a few centuries later, Ptolemy had charted the latitude of cities using the angle of the sun. The people of Kush created sun dials through geometry. The Roman writer Vitruvius lists dials and shadow clocks known at that time in his De architectura. The Tower of the Winds in Athens included both a sundial and a water clock for telling time. A canonical sundial is one that indicates the canonical hours of liturgical acts, and these were…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
52.0197, -0.7715
Parish
Shenley Brook End
Postcode
MK5 7DE
Parliamentary constituency
Milton Keynes Central
Nearest railway station
Milton Keynes Central1.6 km

Sources

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Nearby

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Sundial?
Sundial is in the West Midlands, United Kingdom (postcode MK5 7DE), in the parish of Shenley Brook End.
Is Sundial free to visit?
Yes, Sundial is free to enter.
How do I get to Sundial?
The nearest railway station is Milton Keynes Central, about 1.6 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode MK5 7DE.