Cuckoo Clocks: Tracing The History
The craft of clock making is said to have started in Black Forest, Germany. The
abundance of both time and woods have fashioned the idea of creating clocks,
which was followed after an imported clock from a nearby area.
The first clocks that were produced in this region were rather primitive but are
great alternatives for the sundials hourglasses that were ordinarily use during
those times. Wooden toothed wheels were the first parts and the weights are
normally made of stones. The pendulum was created from the wood named as Waag
that runs back and forth on top of the dial to keep the cuckoo clock in time.
In due time, the inhabitants of the Black Forest became artisans in their own
fields. Some specialized in wood carving, others on clock making. Still others
became clock painters while some make the toothed wheels and the chains.
And from this peaceful countryside of Black Forest town of Schönwald, Germany
did the cuckoo clocks originated. Later, cuckoo clocks have gain worldwide
popularity due to their uniqueness. What was originally the Dutch clock was
reinvented to capture a nature's sound-the cuckoo's call. Franz Ketterer
outlined the system of a clock that imitates the whistles and billows of the
cuckoos. Refinements on the original design of the cuckoo clocks had led to the
familiar set of a chalet or a birdhouse.
Since 1738, the production of the cuckoo clocks is still centralized at the
Black Forest area in Germany, specifically in Neustadt and Triberg. However,
cuckoo clocks are often thought of having its origin from Switzerland.
This confusion may have been due to the fact that there are other versions of
the cuckoo clocks from neighboring regions, which had been around for quite some
time even before the making of the cuckoo clocks. One good example is the
rooster clock.
A cuckoo clock typically has a pendulum built into it. Conceptualized after the
striking of a gong, the cuckoo clocks are characterized by whistles and billows
that are imitated after the calls of the cuckoo birds. The designs of ordinary
cuckoo clocks are often conventional with birds popping up from the openings and
rustic designs all over with occasional nature designs like animals and leaves.
Cuckoo clocks are hanged on the walls and are frequently enclosed in wooden
boxes.
As the clock strikes, the bird that is hidden within the cuckoo clock appears
through the trap door and vanishes immediately after the striking is done.
The typical cuckoo clocks have birds that move everytime the clock strikes. This
is done through an arm that is being lifted from behind the carving. Most cuckoo
clocks are programmed to play musical tunes from a musical box before the hour
strikes. This type of cuckoo clocks has other automata that creates the musical
tunes. Most clocks are driven by weight, they are seldom made with spring
drives.
With modernity comes the change in the cuckoo clocks. There had been created
clocks that imitate the billows and whistles of the cuckoos, only
electronically. Mostly of these are fake quartz that runs through battery.
With the clocks' fame, many of them have moved their ways into the homes
worldwide. Many are still fashioned after the traditional cuckoo clocks but many
were created with the touch of modernity. A display of these clocks is a genuine
mark of Germany.
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Robert Thatcher is a freelance publisher based in
Cupertino, California. He publishes articles and reports in various ezines and
provides cuckoo clock resources on www.about-cuckoo-clocks.info.