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An automaton (/ɔːˈtɒmətən/ ; pl.: automata or automatons) is a relatively self-operating machine, or control mechanism designed to automatically follow a sequence of operations, or respond to predetermined instructions. Some automata, such as bellstrikers in mechanical clocks, are designed to give the illusion to the casual observer that they are operating under their own power or will, like a mechanical robot. The term has long been commonly associated with automated puppets that resemble moving humans or animals, built to impress and/or to entertain people.
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Animatronics are a modern type of automata with electronics, often used for the portrayal of characters or creatures in films and in theme park attractions.
Etymology
The word automaton is the latinization of the Ancient Greek automaton (αὐτόματον), which means "acting of one's own will". It was first used by Homer to describe an automatic door opening, or automatic movement of wheeled tripods. It is more often used to describe non-electronic moving machines, especially those that have been made to resemble human or animal actions, such as the jacks on old public striking clocks, or the cuckoo and any other animated figures on a cuckoo clock.
History
Ancient
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There are many examples of automata in Greek mythology: Hephaestus created automata for his workshop;Talos was an artificial man of bronze; King Alkinous of the Phaiakians employed gold and silver watchdogs. According to Aristotle, Daedalus used quicksilver to make his wooden statue of Aphrodite move. In other Greek legends he used quicksilver to install voice in his moving statues.
The automata in the Hellenistic world were intended as tools, toys, religious spectacles, or prototypes for demonstrating basic scientific principles. Numerous water-powered automata were built by Ktesibios, a Greek inventor and the first head of the Great Library of Alexandria; for example, he "used water to sound a whistle and make a model owl move. He had invented the world's first 'cuckoo clock'". This tradition continued in Alexandria with inventors such as the Greek mathematician Hero of Alexandria (sometimes known as Heron), whose writings on hydraulics, pneumatics, and mechanics described siphons, a fire engine, a water organ, the aeolipile, and a programmable cart.Philo of Byzantium was famous for his inventions.
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Complex mechanical devices are known to have existed in Hellenistic Greece, though the only surviving example is the Antikythera mechanism, the earliest known analog computer. The clockwork is thought to have come originally from Rhodes, where there was apparently a tradition of mechanical engineering; the island was renowned for its automata; to quote Pindar's seventh Olympic Ode:
- The animated figures stand
- Adorning every public street
- And seem to breathe in stone, or
- move their marble feet.
However, the information gleaned from recent scans of the fragments indicate that it may have come from the colonies of Corinth in Sicily and implies a connection with Archimedes.
According to Jewish legend, King Solomon used his wisdom to design a throne with mechanical animals which hailed him as king when he ascended it; upon sitting down an eagle would place a crown upon his head, and a dove would bring him a Torah scroll. It is also said that when King Solomon stepped upon the throne, a mechanism was set in motion. As soon as he stepped upon the first step, a golden ox and a golden lion each stretched out one foot to support him and help him rise to the next step. On each side, the animals helped the King up until he was comfortably seated upon the throne.
In ancient China, a curious account of automata is found in the Lie Zi text, believed to have originated around 400 BCE and compiled around the fourth century CE. Within it there is a description of a much earlier encounter between King Mu of Zhou (1023–957 BCE) and a mechanical engineer known as Yan Shi, an 'artificer'. The latter proudly presented the king with a very realistic and detailed life-size, human-shaped figure of his mechanical handiwork:
The king stared at the figure in astonishment. It walked with rapid strides, moving its head up and down, so that anyone would have taken it for a live human being. The artificer touched its chin, and it began singing, perfectly in tune. He touched its hand, and it began posturing, keeping perfect time...As the performance was drawing to an end, the robot winked its eye and made advances to the ladies in attendance, whereupon the king became incensed and would have had Yen Shih [Yan Shi] executed on the spot had not the latter, in mortal fear, instantly taken the robot to pieces to let him see what it really was. And, indeed, it turned out to be only a construction of leather, wood, glue and lacquer, variously coloured white, black, red and blue. Examining it closely, the king found all the internal organs complete—liver, gall, heart, lungs, spleen, kidneys, stomach and intestines; and over these again, muscles, bones and limbs with their joints, skin, teeth and hair, all of them artificial...The king tried the effect of taking away the heart, and found that the mouth could no longer speak; he took away the liver and the eyes could no longer see; he took away the kidneys and the legs lost their power of locomotion. The king was delighted.
Other notable examples of automata include Archytas' dove, mentioned by Aulus Gellius. Similar Chinese accounts of flying automata are written of the 5th century BC Mohist philosopher Mozi and his contemporary Lu Ban, who made artificial wooden birds (ma yuan) that could successfully fly according to the Han Fei Zi and other texts.
Medieval
This section may contain citations that do not verify the text.(January 2012) |
The manufacturing tradition of automata continued in the Greek world well into the Middle Ages. On his visit to Constantinople in 949 ambassador Liutprand of Cremona described automata in the emperor Theophilos' palace, including
"lions, made either of bronze or wood covered with gold, which struck the ground with their tails and roared with open mouth and quivering tongue," "a tree of gilded bronze, its branches filled with birds, likewise made of bronze gilded over, and these emitted cries appropriate to their species" and "the emperor's throne" itself, which "was made in such a cunning manner that at one moment it was down on the ground, while at another it rose higher and was to be seen up in the air."
Similar automata in the throne room (singing birds, roaring and moving lions) were described by Luitprand's contemporary the Byzantine emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus, in his book De Ceremoniis (Perì tês Basileíou Tákseōs).
In the mid-8th century, the first wind powered automata were built: "statues that turned with the wind over the domes of the four gates and the palace complex of the Round City of Baghdad". The "public spectacle of wind-powered statues had its private counterpart in the 'Abbasid palaces where automata of various types were predominantly displayed." Also in the 8th century, the Muslim alchemist, Jābir ibn Hayyān (Geber), included recipes for constructing artificial snakes, scorpions, and humans that would be subject to their creator's control in his coded Book of Stones. In 827, Abbasid caliph al-Ma'mun had a silver and golden tree in his palace in Baghdad, which had the features of an automatic machine. There were metal birds that sang automatically on the swinging branches of this tree built by Muslim inventors and engineers.[page needed] The Abbasid caliph al-Muqtadir also had a silver and golden tree in his palace in Baghdad in 917, with birds on it flapping their wings and singing. In the 9th century, the Banū Mūsā brothers invented a programmable automatic flute player and which they described in their Book of Ingenious Devices.
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Al-Jazari described complex programmable humanoid automata amongst other machines he designed and constructed in the Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices in 1206. His automaton was a boat with four automatic musicians that floated on a lake to entertain guests at royal drinking parties. His mechanism had a programmable drum machine with pegs (cams) that bump into little levers that operate the percussion. The drummer could be made to play different rhythms and drum patterns if the pegs were moved around.
Al-Jazari constructed a hand washing automaton first employing the flush mechanism now used in modern toilets. It features a female automaton standing by a basin filled with water. When the user pulls the lever, the water drains and the automaton refills the basin. His "peacock fountain" was another more sophisticated hand washing device featuring humanoid automata as servants who offer soap and towels. Mark E. Rosheim describes it as follows: "Pulling a plug on the peacock's tail releases water out of the beak; as the dirty water from the basin fills the hollow base a float rises and actuates a linkage which makes a servant figure appear from behind a door under the peacock and offer soap. When more water is used, a second float at a higher level trips and causes the appearance of a second servant figure—with a towel!"
Al-Jazari thus appears to have been the first inventor to display an interest in creating human-like machines for practical purposes such as manipulating the environment for human comfort. Lamia Balafrej has also pointed out the prevalence of the figure of the automated slave in al-Jazari's treatise. Automated slaves were a frequent motif in ancient and medieval literature but it was not so common to find them described in a technical book. Balafrej has also written about automated female slaves, which appeared in timekeepers and as liquid-serving devices in medieval Arabic sources, thus suggesting a link between feminized forms of labor like housekeeping, medieval slavery, and the imaginary of automation.
In 1066, the Chinese inventor Su Song built a water clock in the form of a tower which featured mechanical figurines which chimed the hours.
Samarangana Sutradhara, a Sanskrit treatise by Bhoja (11th century), includes a chapter about the construction of mechanical contrivances (automata), including mechanical bees and birds, fountains shaped like humans and animals, and male and female dolls that refilled oil lamps, danced, played instruments, and re-enacted scenes from Hindu mythology.[better source needed]
Villard de Honnecourt, in his 1230s sketchbook, depicted an early escapement mechanism in a drawing titled How to make an angel keep pointing his finger toward the Sun with an angel that would perpetually turn to face the sun. He also drew an automaton of a bird with jointed wings, which led to their design implementation in clocks.
At the end of the thirteenth century, Robert II, Count of Artois, built a pleasure garden at his castle at Hesdin that incorporated several automata as entertainment in the walled park. The work was conducted by local workmen and overseen by the Italian knight Renaud Coignet. It included monkey marionettes, a sundial supported by lions and "wild men", mechanized birds, mechanized fountains and a bellows-operated organ. The park was famed for its automata well into the fifteenth century before it was destroyed by English soldiers in the sixteenth century.
The Chinese author Xiao Xun wrote that when the Ming dynasty founder Hongwu (r. 1368–1398) was destroying the palaces of Khanbaliq belonging to the previous Yuan dynasty, there were—among many other mechanical devices—automata found that were in the shape of tigers.
Renaissance and early modern
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The Renaissance witnessed a considerable revival of interest in automata. Hero's treatises were edited and translated into Latin and Italian. Hydraulic and pneumatic automata, similar to those described by Hero, were created for garden grottoes.
Giovanni Fontana, a Paduan engineer in 1420, developed Bellicorum instrumentorum liber which includes a puppet of a camelid driven by a clothed primate twice the height of a human being and an automaton of Mary Magdalene. He also created mechanical devils and rocket-propelled animal automata.
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While functional, early clocks were also often designed as novelties and spectacles which integrated features of automata. Many big and complex clocks with automated figures were built as public spectacles in European town centres. One of the earliest of these large clocks was the Strasbourg astronomical clock, built in the 14th century which takes up the entire side of a cathedral wall. It contained an astronomical calendar, automata depicting animals, saints and the life of Christ. The mechanical rooster of Strasbourg clock was active from 1352 to 1789. The clock still functions to this day, but has undergone several restorations since its initial construction. The Prague astronomical clock was built in 1410, animated figures were added from the 17th century onwards. Numerous clockwork automata were manufactured in the 16th century, principally by the goldsmiths of the Free Imperial Cities of central Europe. These wondrous devices found a home in the cabinet of curiosities or Wunderkammern of the princely courts of Europe.
In 1454, Duke Philip created an entertainment show named The extravagant Feast of the Pheasant, which was intended to influence the Duke's peers to participate in a crusade against the Ottomans but ended up being a grand display of automata, giants, and dwarves.
A banquet in Camilla of Aragon's honor in Italy, 1475, featured a lifelike automated camel. The spectacle was a part of a larger parade which continued over days.
Leonardo da Vinci sketched a complex mechanical knight, which he may have built and exhibited at a celebration hosted by Ludovico Sforza at the court of Milan around 1495. The design of Leonardo's robot was not rediscovered until the 1950s. A functional replica was later built that could move its arms, twist its head, and sit up.
Da Vinci is frequently credited with constructing a mechanical lion, which he presented to King Francois I in Lyon in 1515. Although no record of the device's original designs remain, a recreation of this piece is housed at the Château du Clos Lucé.
The Smithsonian Institution has in its collection a clockwork monk, about 15 in (380 mm) high, possibly dating as early as 1560. The monk is driven by a key-wound spring and walks the path of a square, striking his chest with his right arm, while raising and lowering a small wooden cross and rosary in his left hand, turning and nodding his head, rolling his eyes, and mouthing silent obsequies. From time to time, he brings the cross to his lips and kisses it. It is believed that the monk was manufactured by Juanelo Turriano, mechanician to the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V.
The first description of a modern cuckoo clock was by the Augsburg nobleman Philipp Hainhofer in 1629. The clock belonged to Prince Elector August von Sachsen. By 1650, the workings of mechanical cuckoos were understood and were widely disseminated in Athanasius Kircher's handbook on music, Musurgia Universalis. In what is the first documented description of how a mechanical cuckoo works, a mechanical organ with several automated figures is described. In 18th-century Germany, clockmakers began making cuckoo clocks for sale. Clock shops selling cuckoo clocks became commonplace in the Black Forest region by the middle of the 18th century.
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Japan adopted clockwork automata in the early 17th century as "karakuri" puppets. In 1662, Takeda Omi completed his first butai karakuri and then built several of these large puppets for theatrical exhibitions. Karakuri puppets went through a golden age during the Edo period (1603–1867).
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A new attitude towards automata is to be found in René Descartes when he suggested that the bodies of animals are nothing more than complex machines – the bones, muscles and organs could be replaced with cogs, pistons, and cams. Thus mechanism became the standard to which Nature and the organism was compared.France in the 17th century was the birthplace of those ingenious mechanical toys that were to become prototypes for the engines of the Industrial Revolution. Thus, in 1649, when Louis XIV was still a child, François-Joseph de Camus designed for him a miniature coach, complete with horses and footmen, a page, and a lady within the coach; all these figures exhibited a perfect movement. According to Labat, General de Gennes constructed, in 1688, in addition to machines for gunnery and navigation, a peacock that walked and ate. Athanasius Kircher produced many automata to create Jesuit shows, including a statue which spoke and listened via a speaking tube.
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The world's first successfully-built biomechanical automaton is considered to be The Flute Player, which could play twelve songs, created by the French engineer Jacques de Vaucanson in 1737. He also constructed The Tambourine Player and the Digesting Duck, a mechanical duck that – apart from quacking and flapping its wings – gave the false illusion of eating and defecating, seeming to endorse Cartesian ideas that animals are no more than machines of flesh.
In 1769, a chess-playing machine called the Turk, created by Wolfgang von Kempelen, made the rounds of the courts of Europe purporting to be an automaton.: 34 The Turk beat Benjamin Franklin in a game of chess when Franklin was ambassador to France.: 34–35 The Turk was actually operated from inside by a hidden human director, and was not a true automaton.
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Other 18th century automaton makers include the prolific Swiss Pierre Jaquet-Droz (see Jaquet-Droz automata) and his son Henri-Louis Jaquet-Droz, and his contemporary Henri Maillardet. Maillardet, a Swiss mechanic, created an automaton capable of drawing four pictures and writing three poems. Maillardet's Automaton is now part of the collections at the Franklin Institute Science Museum in Philadelphia. Belgian-born John Joseph Merlin created the mechanism of the Silver Swan automaton, now at Bowes Museum. A musical elephant made by the French clockmaker Hubert Martinet in 1774 is one of the highlights of Waddesdon Manor.Tipu's Tiger is another late-18th century example of automata, made for Tipu Sultan, featuring a European soldier being mauled by a tiger. Catherine the Great of Russia was gifted a very large and elaborate Peacock Clock created by James Cox in 1781 now on display in the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg.
According to philosopher Michel Foucault, Frederick the Great, king of Prussia from 1740 to 1786, was "obsessed" with automata. According to Manuel de Landa, "he put together his armies as a well-oiled clockwork mechanism whose components were robot-like warriors".
In 1801, Joseph Jacquard built his loom automaton that was controlled autonomously with punched cards.
Automata, particularly watches and clocks, were popular in China during the 18th and 19th centuries, and items were produced for the Chinese market. Strong interest by Chinese collectors in the 21st century brought many interesting items to market where they have had dramatic realizations.
Modern
The famous magician Jean-Eugène Robert-Houdin (1805–1871) was known for creating automata for his stage shows.: 33 Automata that acted according to a set of preset instructions were popular with magicians during this time.: 33
In 1840, Italian inventor Innocenzo Manzetti constructed a flute-playing automaton, in the shape of a man, life-size, seated on a chair. Hidden inside the chair were levers, connecting rods and compressed air tubes, which made the automaton's lips and fingers move on the flute according to a program recorded on a cylinder similar to those used in player pianos. The automaton was powered by clockwork and could perform 12 different arias. As part of the performance, it would rise from the chair, bow its head, and roll its eyes.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHdMekJrTDFSbFlVRjFkRzl0WVhSQmJtUk5aV05vWVc1cGMyMHVhbkJuTHpJeU1IQjRMVlJsWVVGMWRHOXRZWFJCYm1STlpXTm9ZVzVwYzIwdWFuQm4uanBn.jpg)
The period between 1860 and 1910 is known as "The Golden Age of Automata". Mechanical coin-operated fortune tellers were introduced to boardwalks in Britain and America. In Paris during this period, many small family based companies of automata makers thrived. From their workshops they exported thousands of clockwork automata and mechanical singing birds around the world. Although now rare and expensive, these French automata attract collectors worldwide. The main French makers were Bontems, Lambert, Phalibois, Renou, Roullet & Decamps, Theroude and Vichy.
Abstract automata theory started in mid-20th century with finite automata; it is applied in branches of formal and natural science including computer science, physics, biology, as well as linguistics.
Contemporary automata continue this tradition with an emphasis on art, rather than technological sophistication. Contemporary automata are represented by the works of Cabaret Mechanical Theatre in the United Kingdom, Thomas Kuntz,Arthur Ganson, Joe Jones and Le Défenseur du Temps by French artist .
Since 1990 Dutch artist Theo Jansen has been building large automated PVC structures called strandbeest (beach animal) that can walk on wind power or compressed air. Jansen claims that he intends them to automatically evolve and develop artificial intelligence, with herds roaming freely over the beach.
British sculptor Sam Smith (1908–1983) was a well-known maker of automata.
Proposals
In 2016, the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts program studied a rover, the Automaton Rover for Extreme Environments, designed to survive for an extended time in Venus' environmental conditions. Unlike other modern automata, AREE is an automaton instead of a robot for practical reasons—Venus's harsh conditions, particularly its surface temperature of 462 °C (864 °F), make operating electronics there for any significant time impossible. It would be controlled by a mechanical computer and driven by wind power.
Clocks
Automaton clocks are clocks which feature automatons within or around the housing and typically activate around the beginning of each hour, at each half hour, or at each quarter hour. They were largely produced from the 1st century BC to the end of the Victorian times in Europe. Older clocks typically featured religious characters or other mythical characters such as Death or Father Time. As time progressed, however, automaton clocks began to feature influential characters at the time of creation, such as kings, famous composers, or industrialists. Examples of automaton clocks include chariot clocks and cuckoo clocks. The Cuckooland Museum exhibits autonomous clocks. While automaton clocks are largely perceived to have been in use during medieval times in Europe, they are largely produced in Japan today.
In Automata theory, clocks are regarded as timed automatons, a type of finite automaton. Automaton clocks being finite essentially means that automaton clocks have a certain number of states in which they can exist. The exact number is the number of combinations possible on a clock with the hour, minute, and second hand: 43,200. The title of timed automaton declares that the automaton changes states at a set rate, which for clocks is 1 state change every second. Clock automata only takes as input the time displayed by the previous state. The automata uses this input to produce the next state, a display of time 1 second later than the previous. Clock automata often also use the previous state's input to 'decide' whether or not the next state requires merely changing the hands on the clock, or if a special function is required, such as a mechanical bird popping out of a house like in cuckoo clocks. This choice is evaluated through the position of complex gears, cams, axles, and other mechanical devices within the automaton.
In art and popular culture throughout history
- One of the oldest stories involving an automaton is "The Sandman" (short story) written in 1816 by E. T. A. Hoffmann.
- The Clockwork Man (1923) by E.V. Odle, features an automaton-like man or cyborg.
- Metropolis (1927 silent film) features a female automaton in this science fiction story.
- Elizabeth King, American artist and sculptor, has work that has focused on automata.
- The Pretended (2000 novel) by Darryl A. Smith features automata doppelgängers in order to critique race.
- The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick (2007 graphic novel) and film of the same name features an automaton.
- The Alchemy of Stone by Ekaterina Sedia is a 2008 novel that features an automaton girl who must be wound up with a key to live.
- The Automation (2014 novel) and its sequel The Pre-programming (2018) features creatures called "Automatons" created by the Greco-Roman god Vulcan.
- Genshin Impact features an enemy group called an Automaton (Chinese: 自律机关) which are mechanical beings with most originating from the lost kingdom of Khaenri'ah.
- Immortals Fenyx Rising (2020) includes a side plot featuring a fallen Hephaistos and his automatons, complete with an automaton boss fight.
- American Gods season 3 (2021) features an automaton at a fair made by an early version of Technical Boy. This differs from the novel the show is based on.
- In the Syberia video game series, one of the main characters is an automaton called Oscar. He is very proud of his own design and dislikes being called a "robot".
- In the video game Helldivers 2, one of the enemy factions is called the Automatons.
See also
- Automata theory, the study of abstract machines and automata
- Mechanical toy
- Wind-up toy
- Android
- Brazen head
- Cellular automaton
- Centre International de la Mécanique d'Art
- Christian Ristow
- Ctesibius
- Genesis Redux
- Fortune teller machine
- Giles Walker
- Golem
- Hero of Alexandria
- La Maison de la Magie Robert-Houdin display of 19th century automata
- Maillardet's automaton
- Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum
- Orchestrion
- Singing bird box
- Theo Jansen
- Whirligig
Further reading
- Bailly, Christian (2003). Automata: The Golden Age: 1848–1914. London: Robert Hale. ISBN 9780709074038.
- Balafrej, Lamia (2022). "Automated Slaves, Ambivalent Images, and Noneffective Machines in al-Jazari's Compendium of the Mechanical Arts, 1206". 21: Inquiries into Art, History, and the Visual. 3 (4): 737–774. doi:10.11588/xxi.2022.4.91685. ISSN 2701-1569.
- Baynes, T. S., ed. (1878). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. III (9th ed.). New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 142. .
- Beyer, Annette (1983). Faszinierende Welt der Automaten : Uhren, Puppen, Spielereien (1st ed.). München: Callwey. ISBN 9783766706591.
- Bowers, Q. David (1974). Encyclopedia of Automatic Musical Instruments (4. printing ed.). Vestal, NY: Vestal Press. ISBN 9780911572087.
- Brauers, Jan (1984). Von der Äolsharfe zum Digitalspieler: 2000 Jahre mechanische Musik, 100 Jahre Schallplatte. München: Klinkhardt & Biermann. ISBN 9783781402393.
- Chapuis, Alfred; Gélis, Edouard (1928). Le monde des automates; étude historique et technique. OCLC 3006589.
- Critchley, Macdonald; Henson, R. A. (1978). Music and the brain. Studies in the neurology of music. London: Heinemann. ISBN 9780433067030.
- Waard, R. D. (1967). From music boxes to street organs. OCLC 609338403.
- Chapuis, Alfred; Droz, Edmond (1956). The Jaquet-Droz mechanical puppets. Neuchatel: Historical Museum. OCLC 315497609.
- Hyman, Wendy Beth (2011). The Automaton in English Renaissance Literature. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-6865-7.
- Cardinal, Catherine; Mercier, François (1993). Museums of horology La Chaux-de-Fonds, Le Locle. Geneva: Banque Paribas. ISBN 9783908184348.
- Montiel, Luis (30 June 2013). "Proles sine matre creata: The Promethean Urge in the History of the Human Body in the West". Asclepio. 65 (1): 001. doi:10.3989/asclepio.2013.01.
- Lapaire, Claude (1992). Clock and Watch Museum, Geneva. Geneva: Art and History Museum. ISBN 9782830600728.
- Ord-Hume, Arthur W. J. G. (1973). Clockwork music: an illustrated history of mechanical musical instruments from the music box to the pianola, from automation lady virginal players to orchestrion. New York: Crown Publishers. ISBN 9780517500002.
- Ord-Hume, Arthur W.J.G. (1978). Barrel organ: the story of the mechanical organ and its repair. South Brunswick, N.J.: A.S. Barnes. ISBN 9780498014826.
- Rausser, Fernand; Bonhôte, Daniel; Baud, Frédy (1972). All'Epoca delle Scatole Musicali, Edizioni Mondo, 175 pp.
- Carrera, Roland; Loiseau, Dominique; Roux, Olivier; Luder, Jean Jacques (1979). Androids: The Jaquet-Droz Automatons. Lausanne: Scriptar. ISBN 9782880120184.
- Troquet, Daniel (1989). The wonderland of music boxes and automata. Sainte-Croix. OCLC 27888631.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Webb, Graham (1984). The musical box handbook (2nd ed.). Vestal, NY: Vestal Press. ISBN 9780911572360.
- Weiss-Stauffacher, Heinrich; Bruhin, Rudolf (1976). The marvelous world of music machines. Tokyo: Kodansha International. ISBN 9780870112584.
- Winter-Jensen, Anne (1987). Automates & musiques: pendules. Genève: Musée de l'horlogerie et de l'émaillerie. ISBN 9782830600476.
- Wosk, Julie (2015). My Fair Ladies: Female Robots, Androids, and Other Artificial Eves. ISBN 9780813563374.
Notes
- This "first cuckoo clock" was further stated and described in the 2007 book The Rise and Fall of Alexandria: Birthplace of the Modern World by Justin Pollard and Howard Reid on page 132: "Soon Ctesibius's clocks were smothered in stopcocks and valves, controlling a host of devices from bells to puppets to mechanical doves that sang to mark the passing of each hour – the very first cuckoo clock!"
- Full title: Bellicorum instrumentorum liber, cum figuris et fictitys litoris conscriptus, Latin for "Illustrated and encrypted book of war instruments"
References
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External links
- The Automata and Art Bots mailing list home page Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
- History
- Modern Automata Museum
- The House of Automata – The largest online gallery of automata
- Automata Magazine
- Maillardet's Automaton
- Japanese Karakuri Archived 2021-03-18 at the Wayback Machine
- J. Douglas Bruce, 'Human Automata in Classical Tradition and Mediaeval Romance', Modern Philology, Vol. 10, No. 4 (Apr., 1913), pp. 511–526
- M. B. Ogle, 'The Perilous Bridge and Human Automata', Modern Language Notes, Vol. 35, No. 3 (Mar., 1920), pp. 129–136
- conservation of automata
- Thomas Edison's talking doll
- Automata in the Waddesdon Manor collection
- Video of elephant automaton on YouTube
- Video of Catherine the Great's 'The Peacock Clock' on YouTube
An automaton ɔː ˈ t ɒ m e t en pl automata or automatons is a relatively self operating machine or control mechanism designed to automatically follow a sequence of operations or respond to predetermined instructions Some automata such as bellstrikers in mechanical clocks are designed to give the illusion to the casual observer that they are operating under their own power or will like a mechanical robot The term has long been commonly associated with automated puppets that resemble moving humans or animals built to impress and or to entertain people A postulated interior of the Duck of Vaucanson 1738 1739 Clockwork crayfish automoton made in Augsburg in 1589 Technical Instrument Museum DresdenPinocchio automaton Animatronics are a modern type of automata with electronics often used for the portrayal of characters or creatures in films and in theme park attractions EtymologyThe word automaton is the latinization of the Ancient Greek automaton aὐtomaton which means acting of one s own will It was first used by Homer to describe an automatic door opening or automatic movement of wheeled tripods It is more often used to describe non electronic moving machines especially those that have been made to resemble human or animal actions such as the jacks on old public striking clocks or the cuckoo and any other animated figures on a cuckoo clock HistoryAncient The book About automata by Hero of Alexandria 1589 edition There are many examples of automata in Greek mythology Hephaestus created automata for his workshop Talos was an artificial man of bronze King Alkinous of the Phaiakians employed gold and silver watchdogs According to Aristotle Daedalus used quicksilver to make his wooden statue of Aphrodite move In other Greek legends he used quicksilver to install voice in his moving statues The automata in the Hellenistic world were intended as tools toys religious spectacles or prototypes for demonstrating basic scientific principles Numerous water powered automata were built by Ktesibios a Greek inventor and the first head of the Great Library of Alexandria for example he used water to sound a whistle and make a model owl move He had invented the world s first cuckoo clock This tradition continued in Alexandria with inventors such as the Greek mathematician Hero of Alexandria sometimes known as Heron whose writings on hydraulics pneumatics and mechanics described siphons a fire engine a water organ the aeolipile and a programmable cart Philo of Byzantium was famous for his inventions The Antikythera mechanism from c 150 100 BC was designed to calculate the positions of astronomical objects Complex mechanical devices are known to have existed in Hellenistic Greece though the only surviving example is the Antikythera mechanism the earliest known analog computer The clockwork is thought to have come originally from Rhodes where there was apparently a tradition of mechanical engineering the island was renowned for its automata to quote Pindar s seventh Olympic Ode The animated figures stand Adorning every public street And seem to breathe in stone or move their marble feet However the information gleaned from recent scans of the fragments indicate that it may have come from the colonies of Corinth in Sicily and implies a connection with Archimedes According to Jewish legend King Solomon used his wisdom to design a throne with mechanical animals which hailed him as king when he ascended it upon sitting down an eagle would place a crown upon his head and a dove would bring him a Torah scroll It is also said that when King Solomon stepped upon the throne a mechanism was set in motion As soon as he stepped upon the first step a golden ox and a golden lion each stretched out one foot to support him and help him rise to the next step On each side the animals helped the King up until he was comfortably seated upon the throne In ancient China a curious account of automata is found in the Lie Zi text believed to have originated around 400 BCE and compiled around the fourth century CE Within it there is a description of a much earlier encounter between King Mu of Zhou 1023 957 BCE and a mechanical engineer known as Yan Shi an artificer The latter proudly presented the king with a very realistic and detailed life size human shaped figure of his mechanical handiwork The king stared at the figure in astonishment It walked with rapid strides moving its head up and down so that anyone would have taken it for a live human being The artificer touched its chin and it began singing perfectly in tune He touched its hand and it began posturing keeping perfect time As the performance was drawing to an end the robot winked its eye and made advances to the ladies in attendance whereupon the king became incensed and would have had Yen Shih Yan Shi executed on the spot had not the latter in mortal fear instantly taken the robot to pieces to let him see what it really was And indeed it turned out to be only a construction of leather wood glue and lacquer variously coloured white black red and blue Examining it closely the king found all the internal organs complete liver gall heart lungs spleen kidneys stomach and intestines and over these again muscles bones and limbs with their joints skin teeth and hair all of them artificial The king tried the effect of taking away the heart and found that the mouth could no longer speak he took away the liver and the eyes could no longer see he took away the kidneys and the legs lost their power of locomotion The king was delighted Other notable examples of automata include Archytas dove mentioned by Aulus Gellius Similar Chinese accounts of flying automata are written of the 5th century BC Mohist philosopher Mozi and his contemporary Lu Ban who made artificial wooden birds ma yuan that could successfully fly according to the Han Fei Zi and other texts Medieval This section may contain citations that do not verify the text Please check for citation inaccuracies January 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message The manufacturing tradition of automata continued in the Greek world well into the Middle Ages On his visit to Constantinople in 949 ambassador Liutprand of Cremona described automata in the emperor Theophilos palace including lions made either of bronze or wood covered with gold which struck the ground with their tails and roared with open mouth and quivering tongue a tree of gilded bronze its branches filled with birds likewise made of bronze gilded over and these emitted cries appropriate to their species and the emperor s throne itself which was made in such a cunning manner that at one moment it was down on the ground while at another it rose higher and was to be seen up in the air Similar automata in the throne room singing birds roaring and moving lions were described by Luitprand s contemporary the Byzantine emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus in his book De Ceremoniis Peri tes Basileiou Takseōs In the mid 8th century the first wind powered automata were built statues that turned with the wind over the domes of the four gates and the palace complex of the Round City of Baghdad The public spectacle of wind powered statues had its private counterpart in the Abbasid palaces where automata of various types were predominantly displayed Also in the 8th century the Muslim alchemist Jabir ibn Hayyan Geber included recipes for constructing artificial snakes scorpions and humans that would be subject to their creator s control in his coded Book of Stones In 827 Abbasid caliph al Ma mun had a silver and golden tree in his palace in Baghdad which had the features of an automatic machine There were metal birds that sang automatically on the swinging branches of this tree built by Muslim inventors and engineers page needed The Abbasid caliph al Muqtadir also had a silver and golden tree in his palace in Baghdad in 917 with birds on it flapping their wings and singing In the 9th century the Banu Musa brothers invented a programmable automatic flute player and which they described in their Book of Ingenious Devices Automaton in the Swiss Museum CIMA source source source source source source source An automaton writing a letter in Swiss Museum CIMA Al Jazari described complex programmable humanoid automata amongst other machines he designed and constructed in the Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices in 1206 His automaton was a boat with four automatic musicians that floated on a lake to entertain guests at royal drinking parties His mechanism had a programmable drum machine with pegs cams that bump into little levers that operate the percussion The drummer could be made to play different rhythms and drum patterns if the pegs were moved around Al Jazari constructed a hand washing automaton first employing the flush mechanism now used in modern toilets It features a female automaton standing by a basin filled with water When the user pulls the lever the water drains and the automaton refills the basin His peacock fountain was another more sophisticated hand washing device featuring humanoid automata as servants who offer soap and towels Mark E Rosheim describes it as follows Pulling a plug on the peacock s tail releases water out of the beak as the dirty water from the basin fills the hollow base a float rises and actuates a linkage which makes a servant figure appear from behind a door under the peacock and offer soap When more water is used a second float at a higher level trips and causes the appearance of a second servant figure with a towel Al Jazari thus appears to have been the first inventor to display an interest in creating human like machines for practical purposes such as manipulating the environment for human comfort Lamia Balafrej has also pointed out the prevalence of the figure of the automated slave in al Jazari s treatise Automated slaves were a frequent motif in ancient and medieval literature but it was not so common to find them described in a technical book Balafrej has also written about automated female slaves which appeared in timekeepers and as liquid serving devices in medieval Arabic sources thus suggesting a link between feminized forms of labor like housekeeping medieval slavery and the imaginary of automation In 1066 the Chinese inventor Su Song built a water clock in the form of a tower which featured mechanical figurines which chimed the hours Samarangana Sutradhara a Sanskrit treatise by Bhoja 11th century includes a chapter about the construction of mechanical contrivances automata including mechanical bees and birds fountains shaped like humans and animals and male and female dolls that refilled oil lamps danced played instruments and re enacted scenes from Hindu mythology better source needed Villard de Honnecourt in his 1230s sketchbook depicted an early escapement mechanism in a drawing titled How to make an angel keep pointing his finger toward the Sun with an angel that would perpetually turn to face the sun He also drew an automaton of a bird with jointed wings which led to their design implementation in clocks At the end of the thirteenth century Robert II Count of Artois built a pleasure garden at his castle at Hesdin that incorporated several automata as entertainment in the walled park The work was conducted by local workmen and overseen by the Italian knight Renaud Coignet It included monkey marionettes a sundial supported by lions and wild men mechanized birds mechanized fountains and a bellows operated organ The park was famed for its automata well into the fifteenth century before it was destroyed by English soldiers in the sixteenth century The Chinese author Xiao Xun wrote that when the Ming dynasty founder Hongwu r 1368 1398 was destroying the palaces of Khanbaliq belonging to the previous Yuan dynasty there were among many other mechanical devices automata found that were in the shape of tigers Renaissance and early modern First Strasbourg clock rooster worked from 1352 to 1789 source source source source A cuckoo clock with a built in automaton of a cuckoo that flaps its wings and opens its beak in time to the sounds of the cuckoo call to mark the number of hours on the analogue dial The Renaissance witnessed a considerable revival of interest in automata Hero s treatises were edited and translated into Latin and Italian Hydraulic and pneumatic automata similar to those described by Hero were created for garden grottoes Giovanni Fontana a Paduan engineer in 1420 developed Bellicorum instrumentorum liber which includes a puppet of a camelid driven by a clothed primate twice the height of a human being and an automaton of Mary Magdalene He also created mechanical devils and rocket propelled animal automata Bell ringing Death on Prague astronomical clock While functional early clocks were also often designed as novelties and spectacles which integrated features of automata Many big and complex clocks with automated figures were built as public spectacles in European town centres One of the earliest of these large clocks was the Strasbourg astronomical clock built in the 14th century which takes up the entire side of a cathedral wall It contained an astronomical calendar automata depicting animals saints and the life of Christ The mechanical rooster of Strasbourg clock was active from 1352 to 1789 The clock still functions to this day but has undergone several restorations since its initial construction The Prague astronomical clock was built in 1410 animated figures were added from the 17th century onwards Numerous clockwork automata were manufactured in the 16th century principally by the goldsmiths of the Free Imperial Cities of central Europe These wondrous devices found a home in the cabinet of curiosities or Wunderkammern of the princely courts of Europe In 1454 Duke Philip created an entertainment show named The extravagant Feast of the Pheasant which was intended to influence the Duke s peers to participate in a crusade against the Ottomans but ended up being a grand display of automata giants and dwarves A banquet in Camilla of Aragon s honor in Italy 1475 featured a lifelike automated camel The spectacle was a part of a larger parade which continued over days Leonardo da Vinci sketched a complex mechanical knight which he may have built and exhibited at a celebration hosted by Ludovico Sforza at the court of Milan around 1495 The design of Leonardo s robot was not rediscovered until the 1950s A functional replica was later built that could move its arms twist its head and sit up Da Vinci is frequently credited with constructing a mechanical lion which he presented to King Francois I in Lyon in 1515 Although no record of the device s original designs remain a recreation of this piece is housed at the Chateau du Clos Luce The Smithsonian Institution has in its collection a clockwork monk about 15 in 380 mm high possibly dating as early as 1560 The monk is driven by a key wound spring and walks the path of a square striking his chest with his right arm while raising and lowering a small wooden cross and rosary in his left hand turning and nodding his head rolling his eyes and mouthing silent obsequies From time to time he brings the cross to his lips and kisses it It is believed that the monk was manufactured by Juanelo Turriano mechanician to the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V The first description of a modern cuckoo clock was by the Augsburg nobleman Philipp Hainhofer in 1629 The clock belonged to Prince Elector August von Sachsen By 1650 the workings of mechanical cuckoos were understood and were widely disseminated in Athanasius Kircher s handbook on music Musurgia Universalis In what is the first documented description of how a mechanical cuckoo works a mechanical organ with several automated figures is described In 18th century Germany clockmakers began making cuckoo clocks for sale Clock shops selling cuckoo clocks became commonplace in the Black Forest region by the middle of the 18th century A Japanese automata theater in Osaka drawn in 18th century The Takeda family opened their automata theater in 1662 Japan adopted clockwork automata in the early 17th century as karakuri puppets In 1662 Takeda Omi completed his first butai karakuri and then built several of these large puppets for theatrical exhibitions Karakuri puppets went through a golden age during the Edo period 1603 1867 Elephant automaton at Waddesdon ManorPeacock Clock created by James Cox A new attitude towards automata is to be found in Rene Descartes when he suggested that the bodies of animals are nothing more than complex machines the bones muscles and organs could be replaced with cogs pistons and cams Thus mechanism became the standard to which Nature and the organism was compared France in the 17th century was the birthplace of those ingenious mechanical toys that were to become prototypes for the engines of the Industrial Revolution Thus in 1649 when Louis XIV was still a child Francois Joseph de Camus designed for him a miniature coach complete with horses and footmen a page and a lady within the coach all these figures exhibited a perfect movement According to Labat General de Gennes constructed in 1688 in addition to machines for gunnery and navigation a peacock that walked and ate Athanasius Kircher produced many automata to create Jesuit shows including a statue which spoke and listened via a speaking tube All three of Vaucanson s Automata The Flute Player The Tambourine Player and Digesting Duck The world s first successfully built biomechanical automaton is considered to be The Flute Player which could play twelve songs created by the French engineer Jacques de Vaucanson in 1737 He also constructed The Tambourine Player and the Digesting Duck a mechanical duck that apart from quacking and flapping its wings gave the false illusion of eating and defecating seeming to endorse Cartesian ideas that animals are no more than machines of flesh In 1769 a chess playing machine called the Turk created by Wolfgang von Kempelen made the rounds of the courts of Europe purporting to be an automaton 34 The Turk beat Benjamin Franklin in a game of chess when Franklin was ambassador to France 34 35 The Turk was actually operated from inside by a hidden human director and was not a true automaton source source source source source source source Maillardet s automaton is drawing a picture Tipu s Tiger made for Tipu Sultan of Mysore featuring a European soldier being mauled by a tiger Other 18th century automaton makers include the prolific Swiss Pierre Jaquet Droz see Jaquet Droz automata and his son Henri Louis Jaquet Droz and his contemporary Henri Maillardet Maillardet a Swiss mechanic created an automaton capable of drawing four pictures and writing three poems Maillardet s Automaton is now part of the collections at the Franklin Institute Science Museum in Philadelphia Belgian born John Joseph Merlin created the mechanism of the Silver Swan automaton now at Bowes Museum A musical elephant made by the French clockmaker Hubert Martinet in 1774 is one of the highlights of Waddesdon Manor Tipu s Tiger is another late 18th century example of automata made for Tipu Sultan featuring a European soldier being mauled by a tiger Catherine the Great of Russia was gifted a very large and elaborate Peacock Clock created by James Cox in 1781 now on display in the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg According to philosopher Michel Foucault Frederick the Great king of Prussia from 1740 to 1786 was obsessed with automata According to Manuel de Landa he put together his armies as a well oiled clockwork mechanism whose components were robot like warriors In 1801 Joseph Jacquard built his loom automaton that was controlled autonomously with punched cards Automata particularly watches and clocks were popular in China during the 18th and 19th centuries and items were produced for the Chinese market Strong interest by Chinese collectors in the 21st century brought many interesting items to market where they have had dramatic realizations Modern A singing bird box made about 1890 by Bontems Bird dressed with iridescent hummingbird feathers and case made of tortoiseshell The famous magician Jean Eugene Robert Houdin 1805 1871 was known for creating automata for his stage shows 33 Automata that acted according to a set of preset instructions were popular with magicians during this time 33 The flute player by Innocenzo Manzetti 1840 In 1840 Italian inventor Innocenzo Manzetti constructed a flute playing automaton in the shape of a man life size seated on a chair Hidden inside the chair were levers connecting rods and compressed air tubes which made the automaton s lips and fingers move on the flute according to a program recorded on a cylinder similar to those used in player pianos The automaton was powered by clockwork and could perform 12 different arias As part of the performance it would rise from the chair bow its head and roll its eyes Tea serving Japanese automaton karakuri ningyō with mechanism right 19th centuryAlexander Pushkin automaton 2010 by Swiss automaton maker Francois Junod The period between 1860 and 1910 is known as The Golden Age of Automata Mechanical coin operated fortune tellers were introduced to boardwalks in Britain and America In Paris during this period many small family based companies of automata makers thrived From their workshops they exported thousands of clockwork automata and mechanical singing birds around the world Although now rare and expensive these French automata attract collectors worldwide The main French makers were Bontems Lambert Phalibois Renou Roullet amp Decamps Theroude and Vichy Abstract automata theory started in mid 20th century with finite automata it is applied in branches of formal and natural science including computer science physics biology as well as linguistics Contemporary automata continue this tradition with an emphasis on art rather than technological sophistication Contemporary automata are represented by the works of Cabaret Mechanical Theatre in the United Kingdom Thomas Kuntz Arthur Ganson Joe Jones and Le Defenseur du Temps by French artist Since 1990 Dutch artist Theo Jansen has been building large automated PVC structures called strandbeest beach animal that can walk on wind power or compressed air Jansen claims that he intends them to automatically evolve and develop artificial intelligence with herds roaming freely over the beach British sculptor Sam Smith 1908 1983 was a well known maker of automata Proposals In 2016 the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts program studied a rover the Automaton Rover for Extreme Environments designed to survive for an extended time in Venus environmental conditions Unlike other modern automata AREE is an automaton instead of a robot for practical reasons Venus s harsh conditions particularly its surface temperature of 462 C 864 F make operating electronics there for any significant time impossible It would be controlled by a mechanical computer and driven by wind power ClocksAutomaton clocks are clocks which feature automatons within or around the housing and typically activate around the beginning of each hour at each half hour or at each quarter hour They were largely produced from the 1st century BC to the end of the Victorian times in Europe Older clocks typically featured religious characters or other mythical characters such as Death or Father Time As time progressed however automaton clocks began to feature influential characters at the time of creation such as kings famous composers or industrialists Examples of automaton clocks include chariot clocks and cuckoo clocks The Cuckooland Museum exhibits autonomous clocks While automaton clocks are largely perceived to have been in use during medieval times in Europe they are largely produced in Japan today In Automata theory clocks are regarded as timed automatons a type of finite automaton Automaton clocks being finite essentially means that automaton clocks have a certain number of states in which they can exist The exact number is the number of combinations possible on a clock with the hour minute and second hand 43 200 The title of timed automaton declares that the automaton changes states at a set rate which for clocks is 1 state change every second Clock automata only takes as input the time displayed by the previous state The automata uses this input to produce the next state a display of time 1 second later than the previous Clock automata often also use the previous state s input to decide whether or not the next state requires merely changing the hands on the clock or if a special function is required such as a mechanical bird popping out of a house like in cuckoo clocks This choice is evaluated through the position of complex gears cams axles and other mechanical devices within the automaton In art and popular culture throughout historyOne of the oldest stories involving an automaton is The Sandman short story written in 1816 by E T A Hoffmann The Clockwork Man 1923 by E V Odle features an automaton like man or cyborg Metropolis 1927 silent film features a female automaton in this science fiction story Elizabeth King American artist and sculptor has work that has focused on automata The Pretended 2000 novel by Darryl A Smith features automata doppelgangers in order to critique race The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick 2007 graphic novel and film of the same name features an automaton The Alchemy of Stone by Ekaterina Sedia is a 2008 novel that features an automaton girl who must be wound up with a key to live The Automation 2014 novel and its sequel The Pre programming 2018 features creatures called Automatons created by the Greco Roman god Vulcan Genshin Impact features an enemy group called an Automaton Chinese 自律机关 which are mechanical beings with most originating from the lost kingdom of Khaenri ah Immortals Fenyx Rising 2020 includes a side plot featuring a fallen Hephaistos and his automatons complete with an automaton boss fight American Gods season 3 2021 features an automaton at a fair made by an early version of Technical Boy This differs from the novel the show is based on In the Syberia video game series one of the main characters is an automaton called Oscar He is very proud of his own design and dislikes being called a robot In the video game Helldivers 2 one of the enemy factions is called the Automatons See alsoAutomata theory the study of abstract machines and automata Mechanical toy Wind up toy Android Brazen head Cellular automaton Centre International de la Mecanique d Art Christian Ristow Ctesibius Genesis Redux Fortune teller machine Giles Walker Golem Hero of Alexandria La Maison de la Magie Robert Houdin display of 19th century automata Maillardet s automaton Marvin s Marvelous Mechanical Museum Orchestrion Singing bird box Theo Jansen WhirligigFurther readingBailly Christian 2003 Automata The Golden Age 1848 1914 London Robert Hale ISBN 9780709074038 Balafrej Lamia 2022 Automated Slaves Ambivalent Images and Noneffective Machines in al Jazari s Compendium of the Mechanical Arts 1206 21 Inquiries into Art History and the Visual 3 4 737 774 doi 10 11588 xxi 2022 4 91685 ISSN 2701 1569 Baynes T S ed 1878 Automaton Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol III 9th ed New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 142 Beyer Annette 1983 Faszinierende Welt der Automaten Uhren Puppen Spielereien 1st ed Munchen Callwey ISBN 9783766706591 Bowers Q David 1974 Encyclopedia of Automatic Musical Instruments 4 printing ed Vestal NY Vestal Press ISBN 9780911572087 Brauers Jan 1984 Von der Aolsharfe zum Digitalspieler 2000 Jahre mechanische Musik 100 Jahre Schallplatte Munchen Klinkhardt amp Biermann ISBN 9783781402393 Chapuis Alfred Gelis Edouard 1928 Le monde des automates etude historique et technique OCLC 3006589 Critchley Macdonald Henson R A 1978 Music and the brain Studies in the neurology of music London Heinemann ISBN 9780433067030 Waard R D 1967 From music boxes to street organs OCLC 609338403 Chapuis Alfred Droz Edmond 1956 The Jaquet Droz mechanical puppets Neuchatel Historical Museum OCLC 315497609 Hyman Wendy Beth 2011 The Automaton in English Renaissance Literature Farnham Surrey Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6865 7 Cardinal Catherine Mercier Francois 1993 Museums of horology La Chaux de Fonds Le Locle Geneva Banque Paribas ISBN 9783908184348 Montiel Luis 30 June 2013 Proles sine matre creata The Promethean Urge in the History of the Human Body in the West Asclepio 65 1 001 doi 10 3989 asclepio 2013 01 Lapaire Claude 1992 Clock and Watch Museum Geneva Geneva Art and History Museum ISBN 9782830600728 Ord Hume Arthur W J G 1973 Clockwork music an illustrated history of mechanical musical instruments from the music box to the pianola from automation lady virginal players to orchestrion New York Crown Publishers ISBN 9780517500002 Ord Hume Arthur W J G 1978 Barrel organ the story of the mechanical organ and its repair South Brunswick N J A S Barnes ISBN 9780498014826 Rausser Fernand Bonhote Daniel Baud Fredy 1972 All Epoca delle Scatole Musicali Edizioni Mondo 175 pp Carrera Roland Loiseau Dominique Roux Olivier Luder Jean Jacques 1979 Androids The Jaquet Droz Automatons Lausanne Scriptar ISBN 9782880120184 Troquet Daniel 1989 The wonderland of music boxes and automata Sainte Croix OCLC 27888631 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Webb Graham 1984 The musical box handbook 2nd ed Vestal NY Vestal Press ISBN 9780911572360 Weiss Stauffacher Heinrich Bruhin Rudolf 1976 The marvelous world of music machines Tokyo Kodansha International ISBN 9780870112584 Winter Jensen Anne 1987 Automates amp musiques pendules Geneve Musee de l horlogerie et de l emaillerie ISBN 9782830600476 Wosk Julie 2015 My Fair Ladies Female Robots Androids and Other Artificial Eves ISBN 9780813563374 NotesThis first cuckoo clock was further stated and described in the 2007 book The Rise and Fall of Alexandria Birthplace of the Modern World by Justin Pollard and Howard Reid on page 132 Soon Ctesibius s clocks were smothered in stopcocks and valves controlling a host of devices from bells to puppets to mechanical doves that sang to mark the passing of each hour the very first cuckoo clock Full title Bellicorum instrumentorum liber cum figuris et fictitys litoris conscriptus Latin for Illustrated and encrypted book of war instruments References Definition of AUTOMATON www merriam webster com 2024 01 04 Retrieved 2024 01 25 Homer Iliad 5 749 Homer Iliad 18 376 Him she found sweating with toil as he moved to and fro about his bellows in eager haste for he was fashioning tripods twenty in all to stand around the wall of his well builded hall and golden wheels had he set beneath the base of each that of themselves they might enter the gathering of the gods at his wish and again return to his house a wonder to behold Homer Iliad 18 371 376 Archived 2023 01 08 at the Wayback Machine he went forth halting but there moved swiftly to support their lord handmaidens wrought of gold in the semblance of living maids In them is understanding in their hearts and in them speech and strength and they know cunning handiwork by gift of the immortal gods These busily moved to support their lord Homer Iliad 18 417 421 Archived 2023 01 08 at the Wayback Machine The automatones of Greek Mythology online Archived 2013 11 06 at the Wayback Machine at the Theoi Project Hyginus Astronomica 2 1 Aristotle 1907 Chapter 3 De Anima Cambridge University Press A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology Daedalus Archived from the original on 2022 11 08 Retrieved 2022 11 08 Noel Sharkey July 4 2007 The programmable robot from Ancient Greece vol 2611 New Scientist Brett Gerard July 1954 The Automata in the Byzantine Throne of Solomon Speculum 29 3 477 487 doi 10 2307 2846790 ISSN 0038 7134 JSTOR 2846790 S2CID 163031682 Harry Henderson 1 January 2009 Encyclopedia of Computer Science and Technology Infobase Publishing p 13 ISBN 978 1 4381 1003 5 Retrieved 28 May 2013 The earliest known analog computing device is the Antikythera mechanism Mindel Nissan King Solomon s Throne www chabad org Needham Volume 2 53 Noct Att L 10 Needham Volume 2 54 Safran Linda 1998 Heaven on Earth Art and the Church in Byzantium Pittsburgh Penn State Press p 30 ISBN 0 271 01670 1 Records Liutprand s description Meri Josef W 2005 Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia vol 2 Routledge p 711 ISBN 0 415 96690 6 Ismail b Ali Ebu l Feda history Weltgeschichte hrsg von Fleischer and Reiske 1789 94 1831 Le Strange Guy 1922 Baghdad during the Abbasid Caliphate from contemporary Arabic and Persian sources 2nd ed Oxford Clarendon Press p 256 Koetsier Teun 2001 On the prehistory of programmable machines musical automata looms calculators Mechanism and Machine Theory 36 5 Elsevier 589 603 doi 10 1016 S0094 114X 01 00005 2 Balafrej Lamia 2022 Automated Slaves Ambivalent Images and Noneffective Machines in al Jazari s Compendium of the Mechanical Arts 1206 21 Inquiries into Art History and the Visual 3 4 737 774 doi 10 11588 xxi 2022 4 91685 ISSN 2701 1569 Nadarajan Gunalan November 2008 Islamic Automation Al Jazari s Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices al Jazari 1026 Category II Chapter 4 Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices p 107 A 13th Century Programmable Robot shef ac uk University of Sheffield Archived from the original on June 29 2007 Rosheim Mark E 1994 Robot Evolution The Development of Anthrobotics Wiley IEEE pp 9 10 ISBN 0 471 02622 0 also at Internet Archive Rosheim Mark E 1994 Robot Evolution The Development of Anthrobotics Wiley IEEE p 9 ISBN 0 471 02622 0 also at Internet Archive Rosheim Mark E 1994 Robot Evolution The Development of Anthrobotics Wiley IEEE p 36 ISBN 0 471 02622 0 Balafrej Lamia 2022 Automated Slaves Ambivalent Images and Noneffective Machines in al Jazari s Compendium of the Mechanical Arts 1206 21 Inquiries into Art History and the Visual 3 4 737 774 doi 10 11588 xxi 2022 4 91685 ISSN 2701 1569 Balafrej Lamia 2023 Instrumental Jawari On Gender Slavery and Technology in Medieval Arabic Sources Al ʿUṣur al Wusṭa 31 96 126 doi 10 52214 uw v31i 10486 ISSN 1068 1051 Needham Volume 4 Part 2 111 Varadpande Manohar Laxman 1987 History of Indian Theatre Volume 1 Abhinav Publications p 68 ISBN 9788170172215 Wujastyk Dominik 2003 The Roots of Ayurveda Selections from Sanskrit Medical Writings Penguin p 222 ISBN 9780140448245 Needham Joseph 1965 Science and Civilisation in China Volume 4 Physics and Physical Technology Part 2 Mechanical Engineering Cambridge University Press p 164 ISBN 9780521058032 Bedini Silvio A 1964 The Role of Automata in the History of Technology Technology and Culture 5 1 24 42 doi 10 2307 3101120 ISSN 0040 165X JSTOR 3101120 S2CID 112528180 de Solla Price Derek J 1964 Automata and the Origins of Mechanism and Mechanistic Philosophy Technology and Culture 5 1 9 23 doi 10 2307 3101119 ISSN 0040 165X JSTOR 3101119 Truitt Elly R 2010 The Garden of Earthly Delights Mahaut of Artois and the Automata at Hesdin Medieval Feminist Forum 46 74 79 doi 10 17077 1536 8742 1850 Landsberg Sylvia 1995 The Medieval Garden New York Thames and Hudson p 22 Macdougall Elisabeth B 1986 Medieval Gardens Dumbarton Oaks ISBN 9780884021469 Retrieved 19 July 2012 Needham Volume 4 Part 2 133 amp 508 Bellicorum Instrumentorum Liber The Faith of a Heretic www krauselabs net 5 November 2015 Retrieved 23 November 2016 Riskin Jessica ed 2007 Genesis Redux Essays in the History and Philosophy of Artificial Life Online Ausg ed Chicago u a University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226720807 Grafton Anthony 2007 The Devil as Automaton Genesis Redux University of Chicago Press pp 46 62 doi 10 7208 chicago 9780226720838 003 0003 ISBN 978 0 226 72081 4 retrieved 2024 02 18 Battisti Eugenio Saccaro Del Buffa Battisti Giuseppa Fontana Giovanni 1984 Le macchine cifrate di Giovanni Fontana con la riproduzione del Cod icon 242 della Bayerische Staatsbibliothek di Monaco di Baviera e la decrittazione di esso e del Cod lat nouv acq 635 della Bibliotheque nationale di Parigi Milano Arcadia Edizioni ISBN 978 88 85684 06 5 Ungerer 1921 L Horloge Astronomique de la Cathedrale de Strasbourg L Astronomie 35 89 102 Bibcode 1921LAstr 35 89U Ungerer Alfred La Redaction 1921 1921LAstr 35 89U Page 91 L Astronomie 35 89 Bibcode 1921LAstr 35 89U Retrieved 2024 02 19 The Real History of Animatronics Rogers Studios Retrieved August 4 2014 Bowles Edmund A 1953 Instruments at the Court of Burgundy 1363 1467 The Galpin Society Journal 6 41 51 doi 10 2307 841716 JSTOR 841716 Sill Christina Rose 2013 04 10 A Survey of Androids and Audiences 285 BCE to the Present Day PDF Summit Research Repository Simon Fraser University 1 16 Moran M E December 2006 The da Vinci robot J Endourol 20 12 986 90 doi 10 1089 end 2006 20 986 PMID 17206888 the date of the design and possible construction of this robot was 1495 Beginning in the 1950s investigators at the University of California began to ponder the significance of some of da Vinci s markings on what appeared to be technical drawings It is now known that da Vinci s robot would have had the outer appearance of a Germanic knight Shirbon Estelle August 14 2009 Da Vinci s lion prowls again after 500 years Reuters Retrieved April 12 2019 Clockwork Prayer Introduction Elizabeth King blackbird archive vcu edu Retrieved 2024 01 25 Molesworth 1914 The Cuckoo Clock JB Lippincott Company Retrieved 10 August 2014 Kircher Athanasius 1650 Musurgia Universalis sive Ars magna consoni amp dissoni Vol 2 Rome p 343f and Plate XXI Miller Justin 2012 Rare and Unusual Black Forest Clocks Schiffer p 30 Markowitz Judith 2014 Robots that Talk and Listen Technology and Social Impact Berlin Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG p 33 ISBN 9781614516033 Duane P Schultz Sydney Ellen Schultz 2008 A History of Modern Psychology Thompson Wadsworth pp 28 34 Fryer David M Marshall John C 1979 The Motives of Jacques de Vaucanson Technology and Culture 20 2 257 doi 10 2307 3103866 JSTOR 3103866 S2CID 111617989 Randi James 1992 Conjuring New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 08634 2 OCLC 26162991 The Bowes Museum gt Collections gt Explore The Collection gt The Silver Swan www thebowesmuseum org uk Archived from the original on 2016 12 11 Retrieved 2014 10 01 Waddesdon Manor 22 July 2015 A Marvellous Elephant Waddesdon Manor via YouTube Michel Foucault Discipline and Punish New York Vintage Books 1979 p 136 The classical age discovered the body as object and target of power The great book of Man the Machine was written simultaneously on two registers the anatomico metaphysical register of which Descartes wrote the first pages and which the physicians and philosophers continued and the technico political register which was constituted by a whole set of regulations and by empirical and calculated methods relating to the army the school and the hospital for controlling or correcting the operations of the body These two registers are quite distinct since it was a question on one hand of submission and use and on the other of functioning and explanation there was a useful body and an intelligible body The celebrated automata of the 18th century were not only a way of illustrating an organism they were also political puppets small scale models of power Frederick the meticulous king of small machines well trained regiments and long exercises was obsessed with them Kolesnikov Jessop Sonia November 25 2011 Chinese Swept Up in Mechanical Mania The New York Times Retrieved November 25 2011 Mechanical curiosities were all the rage in China during the 18th and 19th centuries as the Qing emperors developed a passion for automaton clocks and pocket watches and the Sing Song Merchants as European watchmakers were called were more than happy to encourage that interest Copperfield David Wiseman Richard Britland David 2021 David Copperfield s history of magic New York NY ISBN 978 1 9821 1291 2 OCLC 1236259508 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Keyser Cheryl Fortune Telling Machines Retrieved 2020 10 15 Mahoney Michael S The Structures of Computation and the Mathematical Structure of Nature The Rutherford Journal Retrieved 7 June 2020 Artomic Automata artomic com Archived from the original on 2010 03 05 Retrieved 2008 04 25 Biography Sam Smith 1908 1983 Sam Smith 21 May 2013 Events Sam Smith 21 May 2013 H C Westermann Sam Smith Serpentine Galleries Hall Loura 1 April 2016 Automaton Rover for Extreme Environments AREE NASA Retrieved 29 August 2017 Wang Jiacun 2019 Formal Methods in Computer Science CRC Press p 34 ISBN 978 1 4987 7532 8 How Do Cuckoo Clocks Work www cuckooclocks com Retrieved 2024 06 02 Munchow Joshua 2020 07 19 All About Automata Mechanical Magic With Action Videos Quill amp Pad Retrieved 2024 06 02 Gothic Afterlives Reincarnations of Horror in Film and Popular Media Lexington Books 2019 ISBN 9781498578226 Newitz Annalee The Clockwork Man intro Archived from the original on 2018 08 16 King Elizabeth Clockwork Prayer A Sixteenth Century Mechanical Monk Table of Contents Blackbird Archive Archived from the original on 2002 06 18 Johnson Micaiah 7 August 2020 Three Stories You Absolutely Must Read to Learn About Automatons And One You Definitely Shouldn t Tor com Archived from the original on 2020 08 10 Clanking Automaton Lieutenant Immortals Fenyx Rising Wiki Guide 30 January 2021 Automaton at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from WiktionaryMedia from CommonsTexts from WikisourceExternal linksThe Automata and Art Bots mailing list home page Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine History Modern Automata Museum The House of Automata The largest online gallery of automata Automata Magazine Maillardet s Automaton Japanese Karakuri Archived 2021 03 18 at the Wayback Machine J Douglas Bruce Human Automata in Classical Tradition and Mediaeval Romance Modern Philology Vol 10 No 4 Apr 1913 pp 511 526 M B Ogle The Perilous Bridge and Human Automata Modern Language Notes Vol 35 No 3 Mar 1920 pp 129 136 conservation of automata Thomas Edison s talking doll Automata in the Waddesdon Manor collection Video of elephant automaton on YouTube Video of Catherine the Great s The Peacock Clock on YouTube