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Horology

Horology is the discipline concerned with measuring time and the devices that perform it. It encompasses the science, history, and craft of timekeeping, including the design, construction, regulation, and repair of clocks, watches, and related instruments. Core concepts include escapements, balance wheels and springs, mainsprings, gear trains, pendulums, and oscillators that convert and regulate motion into accurate time signals.

Timekeeping has ancient origins with sundials and water clocks. The development of mechanical clocks in medieval

Modern horology covers a broad range of devices from pocket watches and wristwatches to large public clocks

Applications extend beyond daily timekeeping to navigation, astronomy, telecommunications, and scientific research where precise time measurement

Europe
introduced
gear
trains
and
escapements.
The
invention
of
the
pendulum
clock
by
Christiaan
Huygens
in
the
17th
century
markedly
improved
accuracy.
The
marine
chronometer
of
the
18th
century
enabled
long-distance
sea
navigation.
The
20th
century
brought
electronic
timekeeping,
quartz
oscillators,
and
eventually
atomic
clocks,
which
underpin
international
time
standards
(Coordinated
Universal
Time).
and
precision
chronometers.
Subfields
include
mechanical
and
electronic
watchmaking,
restoration
and
conservation,
and
the
study
of
metrology
and
standards.
Notable
figures
include
Huygens,
Harrison,
Abraham-Louis
Breguet,
John
Arnold,
and
James
Chaplin.
Museums,
horological
societies,
and
manufacturers
worldwide
document
and
advance
the
craft.
is
essential.
Horology
combines
engineering,
physics,
craftsmanship,
and
historical
study,
evolving
with
new
materials
and
timing
technologies
while
preserving
traditional
methods.