Talk:Ferdinand Verbiest

Latest comment: 4 years ago by Martin of Sheffield in topic Aeolipile or turbine

Did You Know...? (23 March 2008)

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This was top of the Main Page DYK list on Easter Sunday (afternoon). I think FV would have been pleased with the timing!

 

EdJogg (talk) 00:47, 24 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

Additional Resources

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General

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  • Fairfield University page - very good stuff, also suggests that the painting IS of Verbiest, with Chinese features. Plenty of scope for DYKs from here. Now included as ref, but formatting needs work!
  • US-based Chinese (history) site -- absolute goldmine! , including big section on astronomy. This page is about Verbiest and includes a painting (origin unspecified) with photos/descriptions of his instruments on subsequent pages...(better than photos on Commons, unfortunately)
  • Blog by Jerry Everard about a visit to the Observatory museum. Good starting point for the article upgrade.

Car-specific

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Pages that mention his steam 'car'...(difficult to isolate from the Wikipedia mirrors).

Note that Googling "verbiest car -wikipedia" is more productive than including 'steam':

  • Five Cool Hybrids To Consider In 2008 (Part 1), by James Raia, states: "Verbiest was a renowned astronomer. But he also spent more than a decade developing a four-wheeled vehicle that could be powered by steam or horse. It was the first hybrid and it was short-lived." -- was this the same as the 'toy', or something different?
  • The Wheels of Invention...Keep on Rolling -- (casual style) article covering development of wheeled transport. Includes suggestion that Verbiest's 'car' was "...kept at China's beautiful Winter Palace until recently, when it mysteriously disappeared. According to written reports, this little car could chug along at a fairly brisk pace, but when the water ran out so did the ride."
Original refs used on other pages

The timeline entry is of limited worth, when compared to other refs found subsequently.
The worth of the book reference is unknown.

  • "SA MOTORING HISTORY - TIME LINE" (PDF). Government of South Australia.
    This link is now dead. Is available at Internet Archive, but not worth the bother.
    Has been replaced on all pages by a link to translation of Hergé's page (see below).
  • Setright, L. J. K. (2004). Drive On!: A Social History of the Motor Car. Granta Books. ISBN 1-86207-698-7.
Not just Verbiest's car...

EdJogg (talk) 16:46, 18 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

How big was the 'car'?

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Added 5th Feb 2008 was an amendment to show that the model was 61cm long. The next edit added the following 'reference', although it was not inserted in-line:

  • Williams, Guy R. The World Of Model Cars, 1976, Rainbird Reference Books Limited

I have remove these from the text as they were added by an anon editor (who has not edited another article) and I have been unable to corroborate them on-line. They have been retained here for future use, and re-instatement if verification is possible.

EdJogg (talk) 14:00, 18 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

contradictory caption

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Original picture, now removed from article -- see 'Caption Update' (Feb 2011):

Verbiest, depicted in the guise of a Chinese priest-astronomer (top right caption reads "resourceful star Wu Yong"(智多星呉用): Wu Yong).
(Painting by Utagawa Kuniyoshi)

<ref>Father Ferdinand Verbiest (1623-88) dressed as a Chinese astrologer scholarsresource.com (British Museum)</ref>

Verbiest, depicted in the guise of a Chinese priest-astronomer. (Painting by Utagawa Kuniyoshi, 1675 (British Museum))

The above appears in the caption of File:Chinese astronomer 1675.jpg but the artist's article states he lived from 1797 to April 14, 1861. Is the date or the artist wrongly attributed? -84user (talk) 13:00, 21 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

In fact the given cite "Fairfield University: "Fr. Ferdinand Verbiest, S.J." (confirming that Verbiest is the character portrayed in the painting)" does not confirm anything to me as there are no images, no mention of 1675, no mention of Utagawa. Has the wrong citation been used here? Maybe I missed it, if so, please could a precise quote from that cite be added to the ref? -84user (talk) 13:10, 21 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

[edit conflict] The caption is taken from the description of the image at Commons, which in turn is (apparently) sourced from a caption in an OUP book. Incidentally, it is a featured picture at Commons and was a candidate for Picture of the Year in 2006....so you would have thought someone might have questioned this before!!
Once this is resolved, the original description must be updated.
EdJogg (talk) 13:15, 21 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
The cite quotes: ...his portrait is shown with Chinese features in a famous Japanese print.... When originally cited, the article DID contain images (I can't see them now either.) If you search for images of Verbiest on-line, you will see this image appearing frequently, with more or less description of what it actually shows. As far as I was concerned, the cited page was sufficient to confirm the link between the person in the picure and Verbiest. The article has not attempted to cite who painted the picture, or when, although there is clearly some confusion about it and it is the duty of this article to put the record straight... Anyone have a suitable reference?
EdJogg (talk) 13:23, 21 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
Try http://www.scholarsresource.com/browse/work/2144596467 for a link between artist and painting. (Found by googling ' "British Museum" Verbiest'.) It doesn't mention '1675', although I would guess that is the date portrayed, rather than the date the painting was created.
EdJogg (talk) 13:28, 21 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

That was quick, I was probably the edit conflict source. I replaced the fairfield cite with your scholarsresource one, and removed the 1675. I now see the 1675 was trying to describe the time period.

I looked at the http://www.faculty.fairfield.edu/jmac/sj/scientists/verbiest.htm using Internet Archive and older versions also fail to show images. However when you change the "GIF" to "gif" in that page, these images are seen, only not this one. It seems (from this internet archive list ) fairfield must have changed their images between 2006-08-30 and now (maybe to the Utagawa image back in March?), but there are no archives of the "gif" images, only the "GIF" images.

Now, the Wu Yong article states it is of Wu Yong, but no source. -84user (talk) 13:57, 21 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Ok, I have now added the same cite to the Wu Yong caption but added a fact tag to the Wu Yong claim. The Japanese wikipedia Wu Yong article (I cannot read it but I follow the internal wikilinks) seems to show the painting is by Utagawa and "of" Verbiest in the style of how "Wu Yong" is depicted. Unless the Japanese editors simply translated the english one. -84user (talk) 14:22, 21 May 2008 (UTC) (fixed my Utagawa Kuniyoshi typos -84user (talk) 15:41, 21 May 2008 (UTC))Reply

That is probably the best approach.
Interestingly, the Wu Yong article does nothing to suggest why the character is surrounded by astronomical instruments ... EdJogg (talk) 00:27, 22 May 2008 (UTC)Reply


I am not quite sure if the this painting is the right one of Ferdinand Verbiest. Although I don't read Japanese, I can surly read the Chinese on the painting which says that it is a portait of Wu Yong and also tells who he is. I am quite sure there is no mentioning of Ferdinand Verbiest, even within the Japanese characters. If it is Ferdinand Verbiest, there must be a story behind it...

Since Wu Yong is a legendary figure in Chinese folk history, a sort of a wise man, a genius who knows everything from astronomy to geography, I am not surprised at all that he is surrounded by astronomical instruments, and it's actually quite adequate... —Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.7.204.161 (talk) 04:15, 3 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Caption Update

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This picture (File:Chinese astronomer 1675.jpg) has now been renamed at Commons, its new name being:

File:Utagawa Kuniyoshi, Portrait of Chicasei Goyô (Wu Yong) (1827–1830).jpg

The description has also been updated, and now reads:

"Chicasei Goyô (in Mandarin Chinese, Wu Yong), a fictional character from the classic Chinese novel Water Margin."

Consequently it has been removed from this article.

I felt that a follow-up note might be in order in case anyone comes looking here for guidance...

-- EdJogg (talk) 13:34, 23 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

Rear wheel drive?

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One look at the drawing of Verbiest's car reveals it's front wheel driven. So, is the mention of rear wheel drive in the article based on other accepted facts, or just an error, or is the drawing wrong? Wurdnurd (talk) 14:47, 25 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

The links above show all the references I have found so far. I agree that the vehicle in the drawing shown will certainly run 'backwards', with the steering wheel trailing, but how accurate is the drawing? If you look at these pictures you will see a document by Hardenberg showing that the fifth wheel acted as a pilot for the steering axle: the drawing in the article rather looks like both axles are rigid. So could the axle-pinion be drawn the right way round? What we really need is access to the document tantalisingly shown in that last link... EdJogg (talk) 22:03, 25 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

brumm

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on note number 18 the pdf link is no more active. I wrote to the producer Brumm, they quickly answered me that now the pic is not any more there in pdf but here: http://www.brumm.it/00-media/00-database/640/OLDFIRE/X06.jpg

Tonii it.wikipedia --79.17.182.227 (talk) 16:16, 25 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

Thank you for finding this. I have now updated the link. EdJogg (talk) 15:35, 8 May 2009 (UTC)Reply
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Project images

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Would be nice to have more images of the project and some datasheet (maybe a new page for the invention itself? Just wondering=) Lawtheagoraphobic (talk) 14:29, 27 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

Aeolipile or turbine

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From the drawing it would appear that the car was propelled by a primitive turbine. The jet impacted upon the turbine and pushed it around whereas in an aeolipile the jet is just used for its reaction, akin to a rocket. Martin of Sheffield (talk) 10:51, 7 July 2020 (UTC)Reply