Prof. Radovan Danic, PhD (1893-1979), an honorary lifetime President of the
Astronomical Society Rudjer Boskovic in Belgrade, owned a brass universal
equinoctial ring sundial (98 mm in diameter), preserved by his descendants,
who continued his work on popularizing astronomy through the activities of
the society. The sundial (ring dial) was measured, tested and compared to
similar portable sundials (pocket sundials) exhibited in various European
museums. In the classification scheme, along with the Parmenion?s and
astronomical rings, it belongs to a group of pocket armillary sundials that
do not require a compass. More precisely, it is a self-orienting armillary
sundial whose rings are located under the circles of the celestial sphere of
the same name at the moment of measurement. Therefore, when the apparent
solar time is known, it turns into a solar compass. A corresponding sundial
on the horizon to the self-orienting armillary sundial is the analemmatic
sundial. The construction of a self-orienting armillary sundial was first
described in the late 16th century by the English mathematician William
Oughtred (1574-1660). In collaboration with the gnomonists from England and
Austria, we determined where and when Professor Danic?s sundial was
constructed: Vienna, second quarter of the 18th century. Originally, the
sundial was adjusted for the latitude of Belgrade or Zemun (nowadays, a
Belgrade municipality), which were under the Austrian rule for a long time
during the 18th century. It is a beautiful, well-crafted, well-preserved,
expensive sundial and astronomical instrument that should be kept in a
museum, in the first place in the Museum of Astronomy of the Astronomical
Observatory in Belgrade.</jats:p