Tag: parlour pendulum

  • Romania and its precious heritage

    Romania and its precious heritage

    The town of Ploiesti is located 60 kilometers from
    Bucharest. One of the town’s most beautiful buildings plays host to the
    Nicolae Simache Clock Museum. We paid a visit to that little precious area,
    under the guidance of the curator of the museum, Carmen Banu.


    We’re in the ‘Nicolae Simache’ Clock
    Museum of Ploiesti, a museum founded in 1963, thanks to Emeritus History
    professor Nicolae Simache, who, in his capacity as director of then the
    Ploiesti Regional History Museum, created 18 museum sections, among which the
    Clock Museum, which, of the string of those cultural institutions, seems to have
    been closest to his heart. It is an architectural gem, it is a building erected
    in the late 19th century, for then the prefect of Prahova county, Luca
    Elefterescu, a conservative politician and the very head of the Conservative
    Party of that time, a magistrate but also a businessman in the oil industry.
    It is one of the most beautiful houses in the southern area of the town, at
    that time the residential area of Ploiesti, built in the neo-Romantic style..


    Carmen Banu about the collection of the museum and its beginnings:


    The Clock Museum in Ploiesti has an
    extremely precious collection. Pieces have been purchased beginning 1954. In
    1955, the first wall clocks were purchased, the so-called Transylvanian clocks,
    which later turned out to have been manufactured in Germany, yet they were
    available in houses around Transylvania. The collection was enriched when a
    batch of 55 clocks was purchased, part of the collection of the famous
    clockmaker from Bucharest, Sebastian Sașa. Hence the idea of founding the Clock
    Museum of Ploiesti. A lot of purchases have been made and today the collection
    boasts around 4,000 pieces, with 500 of them being exhibited in the temporary
    exhibition, they are of course the most representative pieces of the collection. Time
    measurement evolution is being illustrated, from the solar dials, sandglasses,
    water clocks, to wristwatches manufactured in the first half of the 20th
    century. Our collection has exceptional clocks, such as clocks manufactured in
    the Renaissance style, in the mid -16th century, in France and
    Germany, respectively. The oldest of them is a clock manufactured in Blois, in
    1544, by Jakob Acustodia, an horologer of those times. It is one of the pieces de resistance, maybe the most important piece in our collection.
    Another extremely valuable piece is the clock manufactured in 1562 by Jeremias
    Metzker, a famous horologer from Germany, it is a limited-series clock as three
    of them made by Jeremias Metzker are known around the world, the one which is
    part of the Clock Museum collection seems to be the oldest in this series.


    Carmen Banu about the exhibits displayed the museum’s first hall:


    As a novelty, in this hall, returning
    to the first time measuring tools, we have a water clock. It appears no such
    clock can be found in similar collections. Torch clocks were first manufactured in England, in the 17th century and because they were very successful,
    they were manufactured until the 19th century. Our collection has
    two such clocks as well, their name is derived from the semblance with the
    torches of that time.


    Curator Carmen Banu also showed us around the museum and took us to the big clocks’ hall.


    The second hall plays host to the clocks
    of the 18th and the early 19th century. Here,
    attention-grabbing thanks to their dimensions, but also thanks to their beauty,
    are, of course, the parlor pendulums of the 18th century. By all
    means, drawing our attention in this area are the pocket watches, the collection’s
    oldest, manufactured from the late 17th century until the early 19th
    century – watches made by English, French, Swiss clockmakers. The Clock Museum
    Heritage is also comparable to the heritage of museums in Germany, Switzerland,
    the United States. The famous clockmaker Abraham Louis Breguet manufactured
    watches especially for Turkey and in the Topkapi museum some of his works are
    on display as well. He is arguably the most famous clockmaker of all time and
    our collection also boasts clocks made by Breguet.


    The third hall has pocket watches on display, that
    were property of historical personalities.


    Carmen Banu:


    The jewel pocket watches on display in
    the third hall are watches manufactured in the 19th and the 20th
    centuries, which, apart from their technical qualities, do have special artistic
    qualities, through the minuteness of the decorative patterns, there are also
    watches that belonged to several personalities of Romania’s cultural and
    political life. I should like to start with King Carol I watches, we have
    two watches that were part of his collection. In our collection we can also
    find gift watches, among them, a watch offered as a gift by a Romanian woman
    who settled in Switzerland, it is a watch that had been property of Tsar
    Alexander the 2nd and in 1922 the lady offered the watch as a gift
    to the Clock Museum in Ploiesti. As for the wrist watches, we have diplomat
    Nicolae Titulescu’s watch on display, it is a watch made by LeCoultre Manufacturers
    in 1931, we’re speaking about the famous Reverso model created by that firm.
    There are also other watches, extremely beautiful, part of the same series,
    there are curiosity watches, watches enchased in a pince-nez, there’s also a
    watch with masonic insignia.


    We’re taking the final round of our tour, getting our kicks out of seeing the popular clocks on display. This time, Carmen Banu is introducing the popular clocks to us.


    The mantelpiece clocks are well
    represented in the collection, these are mainly French-made clocks, their
    decorative patterns are inspired from the periods when they were created, with
    the gilded bronze as the main material. We’re now moving on to another category
    of clocks of a popular nature, the wall clocks, those were clocks mainly
    manufactured in Germany, in the Black Forest area, and pride of place hold the
    cuckoo clocks. Apart from the pocket watches that used to be property of
    remarkable personalities, the museum’s collection also has clocks that belonged
    to several Romanian authorities, table clocks, wall clocks, and I should like
    to open this series with the watch that belonged to ruling prince Alexandru
    Ioan Cuza – a watch with an astronomical mechanism, which displayed calendar
    data, solstice and equinox days, the leap years. Added to that are the watches that
    belonged to the political personality of Mihail Kogălniceanu, to writer Duiliu
    Zamfirescu, painter Theodor Aman, poet George Coșbuc – it is at least these
    names that are worth drawing visitors so that they can see for themselves those
    special objects. At the time of the pandemic, we’re awaiting out visitors in a
    safe and beautiful area, in an area which is unique in its kind.