The term
chronograph comes from the Greek ( 'time recording'), from ( 'time') and ( 'to write'). Early versions of the chronograph are the only ones that actually used any "writing": marking the dial with a small pen attached to the index so that the length of the pen mark would indicate how much time had elapsed. The first modern chronograph was invented by
Louis Moinet in 1816, solely for working with astronomical equipment. It was
Nicolas Mathieu Rieussec who developed the first marketed chronograph at the behest of King
Louis XVIII in 1821. The King greatly enjoyed watching horse races, but wanted to know exactly how long each race lasted, so Rieussec was commissioned to invent a contraption that would do the job: as a result he developed the first ever commercialized chronograph. Rieussec was considered the inventor of the chronograph until the Louis Moinet pocket chronograph discovery in 2013 when history was rewritten. In addition to inventing the chronograph, Louis Moinet is also the father of High Frequency. In 1816, his Compteur de Tierces timepiece beat at a rhythm of 216,000 vibrations per hour (30 Hz). This frequency record stood for exactly one century, before eventually being broken in 1916, after which standard chronometer frequencies returned to present-day levels (generally 5–10 Hz, or 18,000 to 36,000 vibrations per hour). Still in perfect working order, the Compteur de Tierces is preserved at Ateliers Louis Moinet. In 1913,
Longines created the 13.33Z, one of the first chronograph movements ever developed for a wristwatch, featuring 18 jewels, a diameter of 29 mm and height of 6 mm, and a beat rate of 18,000 vph. It utilized a crown that was used both for winding the watch and serving as a pusher for the chronograph. In 1915,
Gaston Breitling produced the first chronograph with a central seconds hand and a 30-minute counter. Later, in 1923, Gaston Breitling introduced the first chronograph with a separate pusher at 2 o'clock. In 1844 Adolphe Nicole's updated version of the chronograph was the first to include a re-setting feature which now allowed successive measurements, unlike the constantly moving needle in the original chronograph. In the early part of the 20th century, many chronographs were sold with fixed bezels marked in order to function as a
tachymeter. In 1958 the watch company
Heuer introduced a model with a rotating bezel tachymeter for more complex calculations. Chronographs were very popular with aviators as they allowed them to make rapid calculations and conduct precise timing. The demand for chronographs grew along with the aviation industry in the early part of the 20th century. As the US exploration of outer space initially involved only test pilots, by order of President
Dwight D. Eisenhower, chronographs were on the wrists of many early astronauts. Chronograph usage followed a similar trajectory for many fields that involve very precise and/or repeated timing around increasingly more complicated high performance machinery, automobile racing and naval submarine navigation being two examples. As different uses for the chronograph were discovered, the industry responded with different models introducing such features as the
flyback (where the second hand could be rapidly reset to zero), minute and hour timers,
rattrapante (or multiple second hands one of which can be stopped and started independently) and waterproof models for divers and swimmers. Although
self winding watches and clockwork have been around since the late 1700s, the automatic (self winding) chronograph was not invented until the late 1960s. In 1969, the watch companies Heuer, Breitling,
Hamilton, and movement specialist Dubois Dépraz, developed an automatic chronograph in partnership. They developed this technology secretly in an effort to prevent other watchmaking houses from releasing an automatic chronograph first, namely their competition
Zenith and
Seiko. It was in
Geneva and in New York that this partnership shared their first automatic chronograph with the world on March 3, 1969. These first automatic chronographs were labelled "chrono-matic". But
Zenith pre-empted them by unveiling their automatic chronograph 'El Primero' on January 10th, 1969.
Seiko also pre empted the "chrono-matic" group by releasing their first automatic chronograph in February 1969, but the model was only available in the Japanese market. Some of the Seiko chronographs with December 1968 manufacturing date have been unearthed in Japan, pointing to an earlier domestic release, which were not known previously outside of Japan. Many companies sell their own styles of chronographs. While today most chronographs are in the form of wristwatches, in the early 20th century pocket chronographs were very popular. ==Uses==