Benjamin Wegner's sundial
Benjamin Wegner's sundial (Norwegian: Benjamin Wegners solur) is a sundial from around 1837 located in Frogner Park, Oslo, right in front of the Frogner Manor buildings, which today house Oslo City Museum. It was erected by business magnate Benjamin Wegner, the director of Blaafarveværket, after he took over Frogner Manor in 1836. Wegner had a grand oval driveway built in front of the main building with a sundial in the middle of the lawn. The sundial is constructed as an open globe, where the meridians cast a shadow on sunny days onto the inner part of the globe, hitting the inside of the equator line and thus showing the time, specifically the astronomical solar time. Odd Gunnar Skagestad wrote in 2020 that the nearly 200-year-old sundial is greatly neglected and called for efforts to preserve it. It is one of two sundials in Frogner Park, alongside Gustav Vigeland's sundial from ca. 1930.
Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Benjamin Wegner's sundial (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).Benjamin Wegner's sundial
Halvdan Svartes gate, Oslo Frogner
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)
Latitude | Longitude |
---|---|
N 59.9235 ° | E 10.702355555556 ° |
Address
Halvdan Svartes gate
0267 Oslo, Frogner
Norway
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