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I promised to reply to Roger Gosling's request for an opinion on the two histories of British Weights and Measures.  Being now home, I staggered through the Zupko book (reference below) late last night. The summary that Roger attached is accurate - 100 pp of very turgid history (royal attempts at standardisation) followed by long tables of measures.

Roger - the bushel (of which there are many) are discussed at great length, and the claim that this is a Saxon measure is dismissed on the grounds of its etymology (probably Norman French).

I think it is a reasonably good book, but if I had my druthers I'd probably buy Zupko's "Dictionary" (see below), or the book by Connor.

Comments:

(1) in several places in the discussion of Saxon and Norman units, Zupko seemed to be quoting secondary sources and giving the opinions expressed by those authors without their reasons.  However, there is a very extensive Bibliography of primary sources.

(2)  The tables of British measures are listed alphabetically by commodity, first for Imports and then for Exports. There are wide differences between the two lists - imports generally favoring the units that we all used to know and love (lbs., cwt., etc.), exports being fewer in number and in units such as "chalders" (for coal and metals).

(3) The utility of these tables is reduced by: 1. No dates or places are given for the use of the units,  2.  there are no cross-references to the discussion of the units in the text, necessitating going to the index continually.

(4) The table of foreign measures also suffers from lack of date and place. Since these units are not discussed in the text, there is no way to determine which are coeval with which British units.  Also, the units listed are all European and post-classical, in spite of the fact that much is made in the early part of the text of the influence of Greek and Roman classical units and Arabic units (especially of weight) on British units and European units generally.

(5) The book could do with many more tables and diagrams showing the evolution and relationships of different units. It is a typical "work of (liberal) scholarship" in that respect, rather than the kind of thing that scientists and engineers are used to.  If all the data it contains were available on CD in spreadsheet format one could do marvelous things with it.

(6) My impression is that units used in the mining industry are under-represented. That may be because the book officially stops with the Tudor reforms and the creation and circulation of proper standards for each unit in the 17th century, before mining had become so important and diverse. Again, Zupko's "Dictionary" may be more useful here.

(7) The back dustjacket advertises the following book by Zupko that might be more useful for mining historians, in that it gives dated citations of the use of each word, and detailed etymologies, and also goes up to the nineteenth century (covered only in a short postcript in the present book). It is:

ZUPKO, R.E., 1968:  A Dictionary of English Weights and Measures from Anglo-Saxon times to the Nineteenth Century. Univ.Wisconsin Press, Box 1379, Madison, WI 53701. 240 pp.

Below is a tabulation by me of all the measures mentioned as used for mined commodities (I included "oil" as of interest in relation to the current standard BBL of Oil), using Zupko's tables and the Index:  the units used in other countries for individual commodities are not retrievable from Zupko.   From this table you can judge how useful the book is.  Lbs. are Avoirdupois unless otherwise stated.

Commodity   Page      Unit: for Imports     Equiv. in Imp. units    Ditto Exports    Equiv.

Alabaster      104        load                     Unknown                   load                Unknown

Alkali            104        cwt                       112 lbs                     n/a

Alum            104        cwt                       108 lbs                     cwt                 108 lbs Antimony      105        cwt                       100 lbs                     n/a

Arsenic         105        lb                             1 lb                      n/a

Asphalt         105        lb                             1 lb                      n/a

Bitumen        107        lb                             1 lb                      n/a

Brass            108      cwt                         100 lbs                    cwt                 100 lbs

Brimstone (S) 108      cwt                         112 lbs                    n/a

Caen stone   109        ton                       2240 lbs                    n/a

Chalk           110        cwt                         112 lbs                   n/a

Coal              72       n/a                                               chalder   2000 lbs,  2240 later                                                                                      

                                                                                  keel        20 chalders

Coal (Newcastle)                                                         chalder    42 cwt(5936 lb then after 1676: 7168 lbs)

                                                                                  keel         8 chalders

Cobalt          111         lb                               1 lb              n/a

Copper         111       cwt                           112 lbs            cwt                    112 lbs

Gold/Ag Cullen (Koln) 112  mast                    2.5 lb           n/a

Gold/Ag Venice 131  troy lb                           1 lb troy       n/a

Gold foil, leaf     116  gross                            ??               n/a

Culm            112      ton                           2240 lbs           chalder    (weight unknown)

Gypsum       116      ton                           2240 lbs           n/a

Iron              117      stone, cwt, bundle,    14, 112, ?? lb   stone, cwt, ton of  2240 lbs

Lapis Lazuli  118      troy lb                       1 lb (troy)         n/a

Lead            136      bbl, fother                  unknown, 2100 lbs;  n/a

Lead Ore      119      cwt, ton                     112, 2240 lbs   n/a

Lime            136       n/a                                                  chalder      (weight unknown)

Ochre, red    138      hogshead                   (unknown);      n/a

Oil               122      gal, barrel, tun            1, 31.5, 252 gals;  n/a

Paving Stones 123    each, thousand           1, 1,200 items: n/a

Pitch            124      last                            12 bbl              bbl           (approx 1.48 hl)

Tar               139      n/a                                                    bbl       31.5 gals (1.19 hl)

Plaster of Paris 124  mount                     3000 lbs              n/a

Quicksilver     124     lb                                 1 lb

Salt               125     bushel (35.238 litres),                          chalder        (wt unknown)

                    138     barrel(size ??), wey of  42 bushels        barrel           (wt unknown)

Saltpeter       125     cwt                              112 lb              cwt              112 lb

Silver            127     mast                               2.5 lbs          n/a

Stones         138      thousand                   1,200 items        n/a

Tin               129      cwt                              112  lbs           cwt                    112 lbs

This is probably more than anyone wanted to know, but it was fun doing it!



John

>7. British / English Weights and Measures
>
> Date: Thu, 26 Jun 2003 21:39:09 +0100
> From: roger gosling
> Subject: British / English Weights and Measures
>
> I came across references to these two books recently on the internet.
I haven't seen them, but they
> look like they might solve the eternal argument about bushels (no - I
doubt it really!)
>
> Does anyone have any opinions on these books; are they worth tracking
down?
>
> The Weights and Measures of England
> by R D Connor
> H M S O, London, 1987 (422 pages)
> ISBN 0 460 86137 9
> A scholarly and detailed account of the history of the development of
the
> British (Imperial) system of weights and measures from the earliest
times.
>
> British Weights and Measures
> by R E Zupko
> A history from Antiquity to the Seventeenth Century
> The University of Wisconsin Press, 1977 [248 pages]
> ISBN 0 299 07340 8
> The actual history occupies only 100 pages. There is then an
extensive list
> of the various units used in commerce, tables of many pre-Imperial
units, a
> long list of pre-metric measures used in Europe together with their
British
> and metric equivalents, and nearly 40 pages giving other sources.
>
> All the best

>Roger