The clock was installed in 1540 on the gatehouse to the inner court at
Hampton Court Palace. It was designed by
Nicholas Kratzer and made by Nicholas Oursian. This pre-
Copernican and pre-
Galilean astronomical clock is still functioning. The clock is in diameter with three separate copper dials revolving at different speeds and displays the following information: • Hour • Month • Day of month • Twelve signs of the
zodiac • Position of the Sun in the
ecliptic relative to the background stars (zodiac) • Number of days since the beginning of the year •
Phases of the moon • Days since last new moon ( "age of the moon") • Hour when it passes meridian/anti-meridian and thus
high water at
London Bridge. The latter information was of great importance to those visiting this Thames-side palace from London, as the preferred method of transport at the time was by barge. Two consequences flowed: journey time, which departing around high water would speed instead of hinder; and all but the most skilled or reckless watermen above the bridge would avoid nearing
London Bridge at times of great surface-water ebb under the (then famously built-up, barrage-like) bridge to avoid being swept into the starlings (cutwaters) or arches above. The clock was restored in 1711 by William Herbert, with a simplified 18th century face, while retaining the 24-hour dial, and a single clock hand. The astrological dials were removed, and subsequently mislaid. In 1831 the mechanism was replaced with that of a 1799 clock from
St James's Palace. In 1879 the astronomical dials were rediscovered and replaced, and
Gillett & Bland manufactured a new clock movement. The clock was fully restored in 2007 and 2008 by the Cumbria Clock Company in
Dacre, Cumbria in time for the 500th anniversary of the accession of
King Henry VIII. The clock features both on the cover and in the plot of
Robert Galbraith’s
Troubled Blood. ==See also==