The display of the clock is made up of three parts, as was common in the Middle Ages:
Upper part In the upper area is a scene in Renaissance style. • The central part is shaped like a pediment. It has a sculpture of the baby Jesus seated in Mary's lap. • In the pediment itself is the young
King David with a sword and the head of
Goliath in his hands. • Below David is an inscription "
Ludgeri Ringii Mo(naster)iensis opus" ("Work of Ludger Ring of Mü(nster)"). In front of Mary and Jesus is a passageway for figures. Once a day, at noon, there is an automated sequence depicting the
Adoration of the Magi. • First a golden star on a metal rod appears from behind the pediment and stops in front of the depiction of Mary. • Next the right door opens. Metal figures of the
Three Kings come out, march up to Mary and Jesus, bow to them and then depart through the left door. The kings are accompanied by two wooden servants. • While the figures are moving, the chimes play inside the clock with the tunes of "In dulci jubilo“ and "Lobe den Herren“. The upper area is flanked on left and right by two groups of sculpture. • On the left side is a little wooden trumpeter and a woman with a bell. At each full hour, the trumpeter sounds the number of the hour on his horn; the noise actually comes from a wooden pipe inside the clock. The woman beside him then strikes the bell. • The group of sculptures on the right hand side was added in 1696. It depicts death and
Chronos the god of time with a bell. At each quarter hour, Death strikes his bell, while Chronos turns an
hourglass over.
Astrolabium In the central section of the clock is an Astrolabium with the "actual" clock, which shows the
phases of the Moon and the locations of the
planets. • The upper half of the dial contains a Latin inscription:
In hoc horologio mobili poteris haec aliaque multa dignoscere:… (In this moving clock you can see these and many other things:) : "The equal and unequal hours, the central process of the planets, the ascending and descending signs of the
zodiac, and in addition the ascensions and descensions of the
fixed stars. Windows on each side of the dial show where each planet
rules. Above is the adoration of the Three Kings, below is the Kalendarium with the
movable feasts." • In the
spandrels at the corners of the dial are depictions of the
Four Evangelists – instead of the depictions of the
Four Astronomers found on many other astronomical clocks. • The dial is flanked on left and right by two planetary tables.
Kalendarium In the lower part is a Kalendarium, which is covered by a late Gothic grill. It is a
perpetual calendar with the dates for each year from 1540 until 2071. This 532 year time-frame depicts a so-called Dionysian Era, after which the 19 year lunar cycle and the 28 year solar cycle synchronise, so that the same days of the month and week days would apply for 2072 as for 1540. The calendar dial is itself divided into three parts. • In the inner circle are twelve Latin calendar verses with corresponding images for each month. • The information on the next ring out records the days of the year. The ring is divided into 365 windows. At night the calendar dial moves one day later; on leap years it is stopped for one day. This ring records the days of the month, the letter of the day (M, T, W, Th, etc.) in modern fashion, and according to the Roman calendar (
Kalends,
Nones,
Ides) and the names of the months, with the appropriate dates for the
movable feasts and
Easter. • The outer ring displays information on the 532 year Dionysian Era. The years are enumerated from 1540 to 2071. In addition there is information on the date of Easter and other data (
Golden number, Sunday letters in two circles, the
intervallum in two circles and the
indiction). == References ==