Clime

Clime
Diagram showing climatic zones corresponding with those suggested by Aristotle.

The seven climes (from Greek κλίμα, klima, plural klimata, meaning "inclination", referring to the angle between the axis of the celestial sphere and the horizon) was a notion of dividing the Earth into zones in Classical Antiquity. The lists of klimata found in early geographers vary in their extension, but by convention, they numbered seven, counted from south to north. This number was taken up by Ptolemy who in his Geography divided the northern temperate zone into seven zones (klimata).

Aristotle, on the other hand, divided the Earth into five zones, assuming two frigid climes (the arctic and antarctic) around the poles, an uninhabitable torrid clime near the equator, and two temperate climes between the frigid and the torrid ones (Meteorology 2.5,362a32).

Ptolemy

Ptolemy gives a list of parallels, starting with the equator, and proceeding north at intervals, chosen so that the longest day (summer solstice) increases in steps of a quarter of an hour from 12 hours at the equator to 18 hours at 58° N, and then, in larger steps, to 24 hours at the arctic circle.

But for the purposes of his geographical tables, Ptolemy reduces this list to eleven parallels, dividing the area between the equator and 54°1' N into ten segments, at half-hour intervals reaching from 12 hours to 17 hours. Even later in his work, he reduces this to seven parallels, reaching from 16°27' N (13 hours) to 48°32' N (16 hours).

In reducing his original system, informed by the spherical shape of the earth, into seven climes, Ptolemy was thus trying to reconcile his work with the geographical tradition of seven klimata. This division in seven zones may go back to notions of geography predating the idea of a spherical Earth introduced by Pythagoras in the 6th century BC. Persian tradition knows seven karshvar (Modern Persian keshvar) or zones, organizing the world map into a seven-storied ziggurat.

Maybe for this reason, Ptolemy's system of seven climes was primarily adopted by Arab and Persian authors such as al-Biruni, al-Idrisi and al-Razi, the author of the 16th century haft iqlīm (seven climes), while in Europe, Aristotle's system of five climatic zones was more successful. This view dominated in medieval Europe, and existence and inhabitability of the Southern temperate zone, the antipodes, was a matter of dispute.

To identify the parallels delineating his climes, Ptolemy gives a geographical location through which they pass. The following is a list of the 33 parallels of the full system of climes, the reduced system of seven climes is indicated by additional numbers in brackets (note that the latitudes are the ones given by Ptolemy, not the modern exact values):

  1. 12:00 (equator)
  2. 12:15, 4°4' N: Taprobana (Sri Lanka)
  3. 12:30, 8°25' N: Avalite bay (Saylac, Somalia)
  4. 12:45 12°00' N: bay of Adulis (Eritrea)
  5. (1.) 13:00, 16°27' N: Meroe island
  6. 13:15, 20°14' N: Napaton (Sudan)
  7. (2.) 13:30, 23°51' N: Soene (Aswan)
  8. 13:45, 27°12' N: Thebes
  9. (3.) 14:00, 30°22' N: Lower Egypt
  10. 14:15, 33°18' N: Phoenicia
  11. (4.) 14:30, 36°00' N: Rhodes
  12. 14:45, 38°35' N: Smyrna
  13. (5.) 15:00, 40°50' N: Hellespont
  14. 15:15, 43°04' N: Massalia (Marseilles)
  15. (6.) 15:30, 45°01' N: the middle of the Black Sea
  16. 15:45, 46°51' N: Istros river
  17. (7.) 16:00, 48°32' N: the mouths of Borysthenes (Dnepr)
  18. 16:15, 50°04' N: Maiotian lake
  19. 16:30, 51°06' N: the southern shore of Britannia
  20. 16:45, 52°50' N: mouths of the Rhine
  21. 17:00, 54°30' N: mouths of the Tanais river (Don)
  22. 17:15, 55° N: Brigantion in Britannia
  23. 17:30, 56° N: the middle of Great Britain
  24. 17:45, 57° N: Katouraktonion in Britannia
  25. 18:00, 58° N: the southern part of Britannia Minor
  26. 18:30, 59° N: the middle part of Britannia Minor
  27. 19:00, 61° N: the North of Britannia Minor
  28. 19:30, 62° N: Ebudes island
  29. 20:00, 63° N: Thule (Iceland)
  30. 21:00, 64° N: unknown "Scythian people"[?]
  31. 22:00, 65° N
  32. 23:00, 66° N
  33. 24:00, 66°08'40'' N: the polar circle

See also

References

  • J. Lennart Berggren and Alexander Jones, Ptolemy's Geography: An Annotated Translation of the Theoretical Chapters, Princeton University Press (2000).
  • The Itinerary of Alexander through the Seven Climes of Antiquity according to the Aljamiado-Morisco Rrekontamiento del rrey Alisandre. Santa Barbara, CA. Fifth Annual Middle East Studies Regional Conference. March 22, 2003.

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  • Clime — Clime, n. [L. clima. See {Climate}.] A climate; a tract or region of the earth. See {Climate}. [1913 Webster] Turn we to sutvey, Where rougher climes a nobler race display. Goldsmith. [1913 Webster] || …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • clime — clime; homo·clime; …   English syllables

  • clime — index climate, region, section (vicinity), territory Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • clime — [klaım] n [C usually plural] literary [Date: 1500 1600; : Late Latin; Origin: clima; CLIMATE] a place that has a particular type of ↑climate ▪ sunnier climes …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • clime — [ klaım ] noun count OFTEN HUMOROUS a place with a particular type of weather …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • clime — 1540s, chiefly poetic shortening of CLIMATE (Cf. climate) …   Etymology dictionary

  • clime — ► NOUN chiefly literary ▪ a region considered with reference to its climate: sunnier climes. ORIGIN Greek klima slope, zone …   English terms dictionary

  • clime — [klīm] n. [LL clima: see CLIMATE] Old Poet. a region or realm, esp. with reference to its climate …   English World dictionary

  • clime — UK [klaɪm] / US noun [countable] Word forms clime : singular clime plural climes often humorous a place with a particular type of weather …   English dictionary

  • clime — noun /ˈklaɪm/lang=en a) A particular region as defined by its weather or climate. After working hard all of his life, Max retired to warmer climes in Florida. b) Climate. A change of clime was exactly what the family needed …   Wiktionary

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