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German units of measurement

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The units of measurement of German-speaking countries consist of a variety of units, with varying local standard definitions. While many were made redundant with the introduction of the metric system, some of these units are still used in everyday speech and even in stores and on street markets as shorthand for similar amounts in the metric system. For example, some customers ask for one pound (ein Pfund) of something when they want 500 grams.

The metric system became compulsory on 1 January 1872, in Germany and on 1 January 1876, in Austria.[1]

Some obsolete German units have names similar to units that were traditionally used in other countries, and that are still used in a limited number of cases in the United Kingdom (imperial units) and in the United States (United States customary units).

German system

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Before the introduction of the metric system in Germany, almost every town had its own definitions of the units shown below. Often towns posted local definitions on a wall of the city hall. For example, the front wall of the old city hall of Rudolstadt (still standing) has two marks which show the "Rudolstädter Elle", the proper length of the Elle in that city. Supposedly by 1810 there were 112 different standards for the Elle around Germany.[citation needed]

"... the measure of cloth, for example, was elle which in each region stood for a different length. An elle of textile material brought in Frankfurt would get you 54.7 cm of cloth, in Mainz 55.1 cm, in Nuremberg 65.6 cm, in Freiburg 53.5 cm ..."

Length

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Meile (mile)

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A German geographic mile (geographische Meile) is defined as 115 equatorial degrees, equal to 7,420.54 m (24,345.6 ft). A common German mile, land mile, or post mile (Gemeine deutsche Meile, Landmeile, Postmeile) was defined in various ways at different places and different times. After the introduction of the metric system in the 19th century, the Landmeile was generally fixed at 7500 m (the Reichsmeile), but before then there were many local and regional variants (of which some are shown below):

Some kinds of Meile
Place Metric
equivalent
Notes
Breslau (Wrocław) 6700 m Used in all Silesia[2][3]
Bavaria (Bayern) 7415 m Connected to a 115 equatorial degree as 25,406 Bavarian feet.
Württemberg 7449 m
Reichsmeile 7500 m 'imperial mile' – New mile when the metric system was introduced. Prohibited by law in 1908.
Anhalt 7532 m
Denmark, Prussia 7532 m 24,000 Prussian feet. Also known as "(Dänische/Preußische) Landmeile". In 1816, king Frederick William III of Prussia adopted the Danish mile at 7532 m, or 24000 Prussian feet.
Saxony (Sachsen) 7500 m In the 17th–18th century or so, 9062 m = 32000 (Saxon) feet; later 7500 m (as in Prussia and the rest of Germany).
Schleswig-Holstein 8803 m
Baden 8000 m 8889 m before 1810, 8944 m before 1871
Hesse-Kassel 9206 m
Lippe-Detmold 9264 m
Saxony (Sachsen) 9062 m 32000 (Saxon) feet (in the 19th century 7500 m, see above).
Westfalia (Westfalen) 11100 m but also 9250 m
Oldenburg 9894 m
Rhineland (Rheinland) 4119 m
Palatinate (Pfalz) 4630 m
Osnabrück/France 5160 m
Wiesbaden 1000 m

Wegstunde

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One hour's travel, used up to the 19th century. In Germany 12 Meile or 3.71 km (2.31 mi). After 1722 in Saxony 12 post mile = 1000 Dresden rods = 4531 m.[4] In Switzerland 16,000 ft or 4.88 km.

Fuß (foot)

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The Fuß or German foot varied widely from place to place in the German-speaking world, and also with time. In some places, more than one type of Fuß was in use. One source from 1830[5] gives the following values:

Some kinds of Fuß
Place Name Local equivalent Metric equivalent
 
Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle) Feldmaßfuß 16 Klafter 282 mm
Aachen Baufuß 116 Ruthe 288 mm
Aargau, Canton of Fuß 300 mm
Aichstadt, Bavaria old Fuß 307 mm
Altona, Holstein Fuß 286 mm
Anspach, Bavaria Werkfuß 299 mm
Appenzell, Canton of Fuß 313 mm
Aschaffenburg, Bavaria Fuß 288 mm
Augsburg, Bavaria Werkschuh 296 mm
Baden Reichsfuß 10 Zoll, 110 Ruthe 300 mm
Baireuth, Bavaria Fuß 298 mm
Bamberg, Bavaria Fuß 303 mm
Basel, Canton of Stadtschuh 304 mm
Bavaria Fuß 292 mm
Bergamo, Austria Fuß 16 Cavezzo 435 mm
Berlin Prussian Reichsfuß 313.8536 mm[6]
Bern, Canton of gewöhnlicher Fuß 12 Zoll 298 mm
Bern, Canton of Steinbrecherfuß 13 Zoll 317 mm
Bohemia Fuß or Stopa 296 mm
Bozen, Austria Tyroler-Fuß 334 mm
Braunschweig (Brunswick) Fuß 116 Ruthe 285 mm
Bremen Fuß 116 Ruthe 289 mm
Breslau old Silesian Fuß 116 Ruthe 283 mm
Bünden, Canton of churischer Fuß 322 mm
Calenberg Land Fuß 116 Ruthe 292 mm
Carlsruhe (as Baden) Fuß 300 mm
Cassel, Hessen Fuß 114 Ruthe 287 mm
Cleve, Prussia Fuß 295 mm
Cöln am Rhein (Cologne), Prussia Fuß 287 mm
Cremona, Austria old Fuß 480 mm
Danzig, Prussia old Fuß 12 Elle 287 mm
Darmstadt Hessian Reichsfuß 10 Zoll 250 mm
Darmstadt old Darmstadt Fuß 12 Zoll 288 mm
Dordrecht, Netherlands Fuß 361 mm
Dresden, Saxony Fuß 260 mm
Duderstadt, Hanover Fuß 290 mm
Durlach (as Baden) Fuß 300 mm
Durlach old Fuß 291 mm
Emden, Hanover Fuß 296 mm
Erfurt, Prussia old Fuß 114 Feldruthe, 116 Bauruthe 283 mm
Frankfurt am Main Fuß 285 mm
Freiburg, Canton of Werkfuß 12 Zoll, 110 Werkklafter 293 mm
Friedberg in der Wetterau, Oberhessen Fuß 291 mm
Friedrichsstadt, Denmark Fuß 296 mm
Fulda, Kurhessen Werkfuß 12 Elle 250 mm
Genf (Geneva), Canton of Fuß 18 Ruthe 325 mm
Gießen, Oberhessen Fuß 298 mm
Glarus, Canton of Fuß 300 mm
Glatz, Prussia Werkfuß 287 mm
Göttingen, Hanover Fuß 291 mm
Gotha, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha Fuß 287 mm
Halle an der Saale, Prussia Werkfuß 288 mm
Halle an der Saale, Prussia Feldfuß 433 mm
Hamburg Fuß 16 Klafter, 116 Geestruthe 286 mm
Hanau, Hessen Fuß 225 Ruthe 285 mm
Hanover, capital of the Kingdom Fuß 12 Elle, 116 Ruthe 292 mm
Heidelberg, Baden Fuß 278 mm
Heilbronn, Württemberg Fuß 278 mm
Heiligenstadt, Prussia old Fuß 283 mm
Herford, Prussia old Fuß 295 mm
Hildesheim, Hanover Fuß 116 Ruthe 280 mm
Holstein Fuß 296 mm
Innsbruck, Austria Tyroler-Fuß 317 mm
Königsberg, Prussia old Fuß 115 Ruthe 307 mm
Krakau Fuß or Stopa 356 mm
Lausanne, Canton of Waadt Fuß 293 mm
Leipzig, Saxony gewöhnlicher Fuß 12 Elle, 16 Klafter 116 Ruthe 282 mm
Lemberg, Austria Galizian Fuß 297 mm
Lemgo, Lippe Fuß 287 mm
Lindau, Bavaria Fuß 307 mm
Lindau, Bavaria Feldmeßschuh, Bauschuh 289 mm
Linz, Austria Fuß Klafter 303 mm
Lübeck Fuß 291 mm
Lucern, Canton of Fuß (for wood measure) 314 mm
Lucern, Canton of Zimmerwerkschuh 304 mm
Lucern, Canton of Bau- and Feldmeßschuh 284 mm
Milan, Austria old Fuß 398 mm
Mainz, Hessen Werkfuß 314 mm
Mainz, Hessen Kameralfuß (for firewood) 287 mm
Mannheim, Baden Fuß 290 mm
Mecklenburg Fuß 12 Elle, 116 Ruthe 291 mm
Metz, France old Fuß 406 mm
Mühlhausen, Prussia Fuß 116 Ruthe 281 mm
Neufchatel, Principality of Werkfuß 293 mm
Neufchatel, Principality of Feldmeßfuß 318 mm
Nordhausen, Prussia old Fuß 292 mm
Nuremberg, Bavaria Stadtfuß 116 Ruthe 304 mm
Nuremberg, Bavaria Artillery Fuß 292 mm
Oldenburg Fuß 120 Ruthe 296 mm
Osnabrück, Hanover Fuß 279 mm
Padua, Austria Fuß 16 Cavezzo 428 mm
Prague, Austria Bohemian Fuß or Česká stopa 296 mm
Prussia, Rheinland Reichsfuß 313.8536 mm[6]
Ratzeburg, Mecklenburg-Schwerin Fuß 291 mm
Regensburg, Bavaria Fuß 313 mm
Rheinbaiern Fuß 12 Zoll, 13 metre 333 mm
Rheinland Rheinländischer Fuß 313.8536 mm[6]
Rostock, Mecklenburg-Schwerin Fuß 12 Elle, 116 Ruthe 286 mm
Sanct Gallen, Canton of Fuß 313 mm
Schaffhausen, Canton of Fuß 298 mm
Silesia (Austrian part) Fuß 289 mm
Solothurn, Canton of Fuß 293 mm
Stade, Hanover Fuß 291 mm
Stettin, Prussia old Pomeranian Fuß 285 mm
Stralsund, Prussia old Fuß 291 mm
Strassburg, France Fuß 289 mm
Stuttgart Reichsfuß 12 Elle, 110 Ruthe 286 mm
Tessin, Canton of Fuß 397 mm
Thorn, Prussia old Fuß 297 mm
Trento, Austria Fuß 366 mm
Trier, Prussia Land- and Werkfuß 294 mm
Trier, Prussia Waldfuß 310 mm
Trier, Prussia Zimmermannsfuß 305 mm
Tyrol, Austria Fuß 334 mm
Udine, Austria Fuß 329 mm
Ulm, Württemberg Fuß 289 mm
Venice, Austria Fuß 15 Passo 348 mm
Verden, Hanover Fuß 291 mm
Verona, Austria Fuß 16 Cavezzo 347 mm
Vienna, Austria Fuß 16 Klafter 316 mm
Waadt, Canton of Fuß 10 Zoll, 110 Ruthe 300 mm
Wallis, Canton of Fuß 325 mm
Weimar Fuß 282 mm
Wesel, Prussia old Fuß 236 mm
Wetzlar, Prussia old Fuß 274 mm
Wiesbaden, Nassau Fuß 288 mm
Wismar, Mecklenburg-Schwerin Fuß 292 mm
Wittenberg, Prussia old Fuß 283 mm
Worbis, Prussia old Fuß 286 mm
Württemberg Reichsfuß 12 Elle, 110 Ruthe 286 mm
Würzburg, Bavaria Fuß 12 Elle 294 mm
Zug, Canton of Fuß 301 mm
Zug, Canton of Steinfuß 268 mm
Zürich, Canton of Fuß 16 Klafter, 110 Ruthe 301 mm
Except where noted, based on Niemann (1830).[5] The values of the other local units mentioned also varied widely.

Rute (rod)

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A standard at the City Hall in Münster, Germany from 1816; the bar shown is one "Prussian half rod" long.

The Rute or Ruthe is of Carolingian origin,[citation needed] and was used as a land measure. Many different kinds of Ruthe were used at various times in various parts of the German-speaking world. They were subdivided into differing numbers of local Fuß, and were of many different lengths. One source from 1830[5] lists the following:

Some kinds of Ruthe
Place Name Local equivalent Metric equivalent
Aachen (Aix-la-Capelle) Feldmeßruthe 16 Fuß 4.512 m
Baden Ruthe 10 Fuß 3 m
Basel, Canton of Ruthe 16 Fuss 4.864 m
Bern, Canton of Ruthe 10 Fuss 2.932 m
Braunschweig (Brunswick) Ruthe 16 Fuß 4.565 m
Bremen Ruthe 8 Ellen or 16 Fuß 4.626 m
Calenberg Ruthe 16 Fuß 4.677 m
Cassel, Hessen Ruthe 14 Fuß 4.026 m
Hamburg Geestruthe 16 Fuß 4.583 m
Hamburg Marschruthe 14 Fuß 4.010 m
Hannover Ruthe 16 Fuß 4.671 m
Lever, Oldenburg Ruthe 20 Fuß 4.377
Mecklenburg Ruthe 16 Fuß 4.655 m
Nuremberg, Bavaria Ruthe 16 Fuß 4.861 m
Oldenburg Ruthe 20 Fuß 5.927 m
Prussia, Rheinland Ruthe 12 Fuß 3.766 m
Saxony Ruthe 16 Leipziger Fuß 4.512 m
Württemberg Reichsruthe 10 Fuß 2.865 m
Württemberg old Ruthe 16 Fuß 4.583 m
Zürich, Canton of Ruthe 10 Fuss 3.009 m
Except where noted, based on Niemann (1830).[5] The value of the local Fuß also varied widely.

Klafter

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Typically 6 feet. Regional variants from 1.75 m in Baden to 3 m in Switzerland.

Lachter

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The Lachter was the most common unit of length used in mining in German-speaking areas. Its exact length varied from place to place but was roughly between 1.9 and 2.1 m.

Elle (ell)

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Distance between elbow and fingertip. In the North, often 2 feet, In Prussia 178 feet, in the South variable, often 2+12 feet. The smallest known German Elle is 402.8 mm (15.86 in), the longest 811 mm (31.9 in).

Zoll (inch)

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Usually 112 foot, but also 111 and 110.

Linie

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Usually 112 inch, but also 110.

Volume

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Quent

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Being 1/5 of any measure

Malter

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Is a larger volume unit of around one large sack of wheat a person could carry. However, the exact volumetric size and weight was locally very different in each feudal state. For more details, see [1].

Klafter

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For firewood, 2.905 m3 (102.6 cu ft)

Nösel

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In general, the Nösel (also spelled Össel) was a measure of liquid volume equal to half a Kanne ("jar," "jug," "bottle," "can"). Volume often varied depending on whether it was beer or wine. Its subdivisions were the Halbnösel ("Half-Nösel") and the Viertelnösel ("Quarter-Nösel).

An Ahm was a measure used for wine or beer. An Eimer ("Bucket") was a container that was a fifth of an Ahm. A Viertel ("Fourth") was a fourth of an Eimer. A Stübchen ("Cozy Room") also a Stauf was a measure of wine or beer that was equal to 2 Kannen. It was the approximate amount of wine or beer that could serve an entire room in a tavern. A Kanne was a measure of wine or beer large enough to fill a humpen (tankard) or krug (wine flagon or beer pitcher). A Quartier ("quarter-measure") was a fourth of a Stübchen. A Nösel was a cup or mug of wine or beer.

Actual volumes so measured, however, varied from one state or even one city to another. Within Saxony, for example, the "Dresden jar" held approximately 1 US quart or 0.95 litres or 0.83 imperial quarts, so a nösel in Dresden was about 1 US pint (0.47 L; 0.83 imp pt). The full volume of a "Leipzig jar" measured 1.2 liters (1.3 U.S. qt; 1.1 imp qt); the Leipzig nösel was therefore 0.6 liters (0.63 U.S. qt; 0.53 imp qt).

1320 Ahm = 164 Eimer = 116 Viertel = 18 Stübchen / Stauf = 14 Kannen = 12 Quartiers = 1 Nösel = 2 Halbnöseln = 4 Viertelnöseln

The nösel was used in minor commerce, as well as in the household to measure meal, grain, and such. These units of measure were officially valid in Saxony until 1868, when the metric system was introduced. Nevertheless, the old measures have continued in private use for decades.

One modification was introduced in Thuringia. There, the nösel was, by extension, also a measure of area; namely, the area of land which could be sown with one nösel of seed – or about 19.36 square yards (16.19 m2; 0.00400 acres)

Mass

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Pfund

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Mark

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12 Pfund. Equal to 233.856 g (Cologne).

Unze

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116 Pfund. Roughly equal to 29.23 g.

Loth

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132 Pfund, or 116 Mark. Equal to 14.606 g (Prussia).

Quentchen

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196 Pfund. Roughly equal to 4.872 g.

Quint

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1128 Pfund. Roughly equal to 3.65 g.

Pfennig

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1512 Pfund. Roughly equal to 0.9135 g.

Gran

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17690 Pfund. Roughly equal to 0.0609 g.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Barnard, Frederick Augustus Porter (1879). The Metric system of weights and measures. American Metric Bureau. pp. 220–2. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
  2. ^ Harasimowicz, Jan [in Polish]; Suleja, Włodzimierz [in Polish] (2000). Encyklopedia Wrocławia (in Polish) (Wyd. 1 ed.). Wrocław: Wydawn. Dolnośląskie. ISBN 9788370237493. OCLC 46420892.
  3. ^ Davies, Norman; Moorhouse, Roger (2002). Mikrokosmos : portret miasta środkowoeuropejskiego : Vratislava, Breslau, Wrocław (in Polish). Translated by Pawelec, Andrzej (Wyd. 1 ed.). Kraków: Wydawn. Znak. ISBN 9788324001729. OCLC 50928641.
  4. ^ "Historie der Postsäulen" (in German). Forschungsgruppe Kursächsische Postmeilensäulen e.V. und 1. Sächsischer Postkutschenverein e.V. Archived from the original on 5 February 2017. Retrieved 5 February 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d Niemann, Friedrich (1830) Vollständiges Handbuch der Münzen, Masse, und Gewichte aller Länder der Erde fur Kaufleute, Banquiers ...: in alphabetischer Ordnung. Quedlinburg und Leipzig, G. Basse. p. 286
  6. ^ a b c Tate (1868), p. 49

Bibliography

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