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Infinity Dragon Sandtimer
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Infinity Dragon Sandtimer

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Infinity Dragon Sandtimer

A Popular Item!
Size: 6" high

Classically gothic dragon sand timer with red sand. This piece is a very detailed and functional, 15 minute timer. An awesome piece to add to your fantasy collection!

History of the Hourglass

It is only with the introduction of the mechanical clock that time began to be measured in discrete units. Before the 15th century time was thought to be flowing. That concept resulted in the clepsydra, but heat and cold rendered water unreliable as a time medium. Dried sand passing from one container to another through a narrow aperture was unaffected by weather, so the sand hourglass became the ultimate expression of flowing time measuring a unit.

Public speeches and sermons were the most notable events timed with a sand glass. One of the greatest pleasures of our Puritan ancestors was the two hour Sunday sermon. Hourglasses were placed upon the pulpit and woe betide he who overran the two full hours. Certain of the clergy did overdo it, however, and during the reign of Queen Victoria an eighteen minute glass appeared in her church. Newspapers ran comments on the matter as being a direct protest from Her Majesty at the length of the sermons. Because hourglasses remain relatively unaffected by heat, cold and swinging about, they have a long history at sea.


There are records of sand glasses in ships' inventories from about 1400 A.D. Small sand glasses were used as interval timers to measure speed in navigation. A log was thrown over the side with a line knotted about every 47 feet attached to it. The speed at which the knots ran out was measured by the 28-second glass, giving nautical speed in "knots".