with a volume of one US gallon The term derives most immediately from
galun,
galon in
Old Norman French, but the usage was common in several languages, for example in
Old French and (bowl) in Old English. This suggests a common origin in
Romance Latin, but the ultimate source of the word is unknown.
Gallonage is the term used for a capacity or amount measured in gallons. The gallon originated as the basis of systems for measuring
wine and
beer in England. The sizes of gallon used in these two systems were different from each other: the first was based on the
wine gallon (equal in size to the US gallon), and the second was based on the ale gallon (1.65% larger than the imperial gallon). By the end of the 18th century, there were three definitions of the gallon in common use: • The
corn gallon (or
Winchester gallon) of about (≈), • The
wine gallon (or ''Queen Anne's gallon'') of (), and • The
ale gallon of (). The
corn or
dry gallon was used in the United States for grain and other dry commodities until the 1990s. It was one-eighth of the (Winchester) bushel, originally defined as a cylindrical measure of inches in diameter and 8 inches in depth, which made the bushel . The bushel was later redefined to be 2,150.42 cubic inches exactly, thus making its gallon exactly (); in previous centuries, there had been a corn gallon of between 271 and 272 cubic inches. The
wine gallon was legally adopted as the standard US gallon in 1836. Some sources relate this to the volume occupied by eight medieval
merchants' pounds of wine: this was at one time defined as the volume of a cylinder 6 inches deep and 7 inches in diameter, i.e. . It was redefined in 1706 during the reign of
Queen Anne as being exactly , the earlier definition with being approximated as . \pi r^2h \approx \frac{22}{7}\times\left ( \frac{7 ~ \mathrm{in}}{2} \right )^2\times6 ~ \mathrm{in} = 231 ~ \mathrm{in}^3. Although the wine gallon had been used for centuries for import duty purposes, there was no legal standard of it in the
Exchequer, and a smaller gallon of () was actually in use, which required this statute to resolve these issues: remains the definition of a gallon in the US today. In 1824, Britain adopted the
imperial gallon, and abolished all other gallons in favour of it. The imperial gallon was defined as the volume of 10 pounds of distilled water weighed in air with brass weights with the barometer standing at and at a temperature of , which was calculated as (or to ten significant figures). This value lasted until 1889, when an Order in Council of November 28 of that year redefined the imperial gallon as (or to ten significant figures). In 1963, the definition was again refined as the space occupied by 10 pounds of distilled water of density weighed in air of density against weights of density (the original "brass" was refined as the densities of
brass alloys vary depending on metallurgical composition), which was calculated as (≈ ) to ten significant figures. The definition of exactly cubic decimetres (also or ≈ ) came after the litre was redefined in 1964: this value was adopted shortly afterwards in Canada, and was adopted in 1976 in the United Kingdom.
Sizes of gallons Historically, gallons of various sizes were used in many parts of Western Europe. In these localities, it has been replaced as the unit of capacity by the
litre. ==References==