Dutch tales

By ThisIsGerda

In Franeker

Today we visited Franeker, the last on our list of the 11 Frisian cities. With as highlight a visit to a planetarium from 1781!

From the website of the unesco world heritage:
Built between 1774 and 1781, this property is a moving mechanical scale model of the solar system as it was known at the time. Conceived and built by an ordinary citizen – the wool manufacturer Eise Eisinga – the model is built into the ceiling and south wall of the former living room/bedroom of its creator. Powered by one single pendulum clock, it provides a realistic image of the positions of the Sun, the Moon, the Earth and five other planets (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn). The planets revolve around the Sun in real time and the distance between the planets is at scale. The model fills the entire ceiling of the room, making it one of the earliest predecessors of the ceiling and projection planetariums of the 20th and 21st centuries.


We've been here before when we were children about 50 years ago. We were as much in awe now as we were then. Stepping back into time into the living and bedroom of Eise Eisinga with his still functioning planetarium. He left notes when an adjustment needs to be made, for instance in a leap year. Other than that he provided a clockwork that keeps everything going as it does in our skies. 


Of course we also found the 11th fountain, next to a church. 

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