The Astrolabe is an ancient device based on principles of stereographic known in Ancient Greece, which, whilst not strictly a calculator, can be considered a circular look-up slide-rule type device for tracking the movements of celestial bodies. It has moveable parts which enable the trajectories of the known star constellations at a particular lattitude to be aligned with a particular constellation sighted at a particular elevation. From this the time can be read off. Beyond this there some 100 possible operations that can be performed with an astrolabe.
There are some 2000 astrolabes in museums around the world. This “astrolabe” however is certainly a fake. James E. Morrison, a world expert on these devices notes that it is definitely not a working astrolabe but rather a poorly executed fake which, as I feared, misses some key features which would enable it to actually work. He notes that in his experience only two of the various items people have asked him about have actually turned out to be genuine working astrolabes. He notes:
Assembled Astrolabe: Is the indicator a rule (to go on the front face) or (more likely) an adilade (to go on the back face)?
Astrolabe Mater Back Face
Astrolabe Mater Back Face
Astrolabe Mater Front Face
Note that this face is divided into 8 semi-quadrants. The first two characters in each semi-quadrant (reading from right to left, as does Jawi script) are ا لا Reading from right to left (as does Jawi script) these are the characters alif lam-alif which is Allah spelled phonetically.
Plate 1
Plate 2
Plate 3
Mater, Rete, Alidade (Rule?) and Plates.
1 From http://www.omniglot.com/writing/malay.htm (↑)
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