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A. LANGE & SÖHNE - The attraction of the moon
 
Le 04-06-2013
de A. Lange & Söhne, Branch of Richemont International SA 

The moon has always been irresistibly fascinating for people all over the world. So much so that it became the reference for the passage of time and a focus of scientific analysis. In the 18th century, Dresden was not only a centre of precision watchmaking but also a hub of celestial observation and lunar research – of selenography, to be precise, the systematic mapping of the moon's surface. At the Mathematics and Physics Salon in Dresden’s Zwinger, astronomers used telescopes to create detailed maps of its visible topographic features. Today, milestones of lunar research in Saxony are on display in the scientific history collection of the museum that belongs to the Dresden State Art Collections. It reopened not long ago after renovation and is co-sponsored by A. Lange & Söhne.

Ever since the first astronomical clocks were built in the 14th century, it has been a declared objective in horology to emulate the progression of the moon as accurately as possible. The technical challenge involved in this complication is to ever more accurately approximate the lunar month of 29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes, and 3 seconds. With a moon-phase display that needs to be corrected by merely one day every 122.6 years, A. Lange & Söhne has attained a highly realistic degree of accuracy.

Since the brand's legendary comeback in 1994, the manufacture has presented no fewer than twelve calibres with moon-phase displays. Among them are the LANGE 1 MOONPHASE based on Lange's design icon, and the 1815 RATTRAPANTE PERPETUAL CALENDAR, which had its debut this year. The coating of the lunar discs is another noteworthy aspect. Their exceptional brilliance is based on optical interference effects that reflect only the blue portions of the visible light spectrum.

The encounters between timekeeping instruments and the selenographic exhibits in the collection of the Mathematics and Physics Salon emphasise the strong attraction of the moon in two related disciplines: astronomy and precision watchmaking.


1815 RATTRAPANTE PERPETUAL CALENDAR and a lunar globe, Ernst Fischer, Dresden, 1875
It took Ernst Fischer of Dresden eleven years to sculpt the front side of the moon according to photographs and his own observations. The globe is stunning as regards its size and the plasticity with which it renders the plains, craters, and mountains. Because the rotation of the moon is synchronised with that of the earth, it was impossible to map the "dark" side until it was orbited by the Soviet Union's Lunik 3 satellite in 1959. With a split-seconds chronograph, a perpetual calendar, a moon-phase display, and a power-reserve indicator, the 1815 RATTRAPANTE PERPETUAL CALENDAR unites more horological complications than the clearly organised dial suggests at first sight.

LANGE 1 MOONPHASE and moon medallion, Eduard Lehr, Archenhold Observatory, Treptow, 1900
The world's longest refractive telescope – 35 metres long – is located in the observatory in Berlin-Treptow. It was established by Friedrich Simon Archenhold and is named after him today. The so-called moon medallions were inspired by his idea. With a ten-fold exaggeration of altitudes, the reliefs present a plastic rendition of the moon's topography. The horological charm of the LANGE 1 MOONPHASE lies in its remarkably accurate and fetchingly realistic display of the waxing and waning moon.


1815 RATTRAPANTE PERPETUAL CALENDAR on lunar map, Wilhelm Gotthelf Lohrmann, Leipzig, 1824
Working in Dresden, the astronomer and land measurer Wilhelm Gotthelf Lohrmann systematically observed the surface of the moon and in 1824 published his findings under the title "Topography of the Moon". In 1827, he was appointed chief inspector of the Mathematics and Physics Salon and later, as the director of the newly founded Technical Academy, one of Ferdinand A. Lange's teachers. The recently launched Lange model 1815 RATTRAPANTE PERPETUAL CALENDAR unites the technical fascination of a split-seconds chronograph with the precision of a perpetual calendar.



About A. Lange & Söhne
When Ferdinand A. Lange, a Dresden watchmaker, established his watch manufactory in 1845, he laid the cornerstone of Saxony’s precision watchmaking. His precious pocket watches remain highly coveted among collectors all over the world. The company was expropriated after World War II, and the name A. Lange & Söhne nearly fell into oblivion. In 1990, Ferdinand A. Lange’s great-grandson Walter Lange had the courage to relaunch the brand. Today, Lange crafts only a few thousand wristwatches in gold or platinum per year. They are endowed exclusively with proprietary movements that are lavishly decorated and assembled by hand. In a period of little more than 20 years, A. Lange & Söhne developed over 40 manufacture calibres and secured a top-tier position among the world’s finest watch brands. Its greatest successes include innovative time-keeping instruments such as the LANGE 1 with the first outsize date in a series produced wristwatch as well as the LANGE ZEITWERK with its supremely legible, precisely jumping numerals. Meanwhile, both models have become icons of a brand rich in tradition.


Original Language: English

 



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