Japanese Protractor, 1876 World's Fair Description This brass circular protractor is divided by single degrees and marked every thirty degrees in the clockwise direction with Japanese characters facing outwards and representing the Chinese zodiac: mouse, cow, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, sheep, monkey, chicken, dog, and boar. Location Currently not on view date made 1876 ID Number MA.261305 accession number 51116 catalog number 261305 Data Source National Museum of American History Bureau of Education, Annual Report of the Commissioner (1876), ccxi–ccxii. Walker (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1880), viii:143, 335 U.S. Centennial Commission, International Exhibition, 1876. References: Japan, Department of Education, An Outline History of Japanese Education: Prepared for the Philadelphia International Exhibition, 1876 (New York: D. No information about the maker of this protractor is known. The museum closed in 1906 due to high maintenance costs, and much of the collection was transferred to the Smithsonian in 1910. Commissioner of Education, arranged for the transfer of the entire exhibit in which this protractor appeared to the Bureau of Education (then part of the Department of the Interior) for a planned museum. In fact, Japan's Department of Education had just been established in 1870 to replace an Educational Board and to assume a more active role in the management of primary, middle, and secondary schools. The government of Japan aimed to demonstrate its nation's modernity and progress. The top of each symbol faces the center of the protractor. The protractor is marked every thirty degrees in the clockwise direction with Japanese characters for the twelve animals in the Chinese zodiac: mouse, cow, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, sheep, monkey, chicken, dog, and boar. A notch for accessing the origin point is cut into the fourth quadrant of the crossbars spanning the diameter of the protractor. ![]() Japanese Protractor, 1876 World's Fair Description The Japanese Empire Department of Education displayed this circular brass protractor at the 1876 World's Fair, the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |