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Archive 1Archive 2Archive 3Archive 5

Miles

While inches and feet have remained pretty constant, the riddle that puzzles me is to trace the history of the various miles. There seem to be at least 4 species:
The ~10 km Egyptian mile, carried on in the Greek scoinios. No Roman equivalent? Must surely be the origin of the ~10 km Norwegian and Swedish land miles.
The ~6-7 km mile. Why the change? Presumably to get it in accordance with degrees. When did this happen? Did the Greeks do this at some stage? The German geographical mile and Nordic sea miles at ~7.5 km must be related? Is Goethe connected to this (he was a pioneer of land measurement)? For navigation at sea, it was significant to have a measure which related directly to the degree. On land, not so important.

" The ~1.6 km UK/US mile, with origins from the 1000 paces is a pure Roman invention. " The ~1.8 Nautical mile, based on the ~1.8 km geograpical miles. Why two different equatorial miles? Which came first?

Short answer

Miles
The Greek Milos of 4800 pous and
the Roman Milliare of 5000 pes and
The English Myle of c 49 BC - 1593 AD
are 8 stadions, stadiums, furlongs of 185 m.
Stadions
The ordinary Mesopotamian sos or side at 6 iku and 180 meters
was the basis for the Egyptian minute of march
the Egyptian minute of march at 183 m and 350 royal cubits
was the basis for the stadion of the Greek Milos
The stadion of the Greek Milos at 6 plethrons or 100 orguia and
600 Atic pous of 308.4 mm at 185 m
was the basis for the stadium of the Roman milliare
The stadium of the Roman Milliare at 625 pes of 296 mm
was also 185 m and at 1000 passus of 5 pes
was the basis for the furlong of 625 fote of the English Myle
Leauges
3 Milos of 4800 pous = 24 stadions = 14,400 pous = 1 leauge = 4440 m
3 Milliare of 5000 pes = 24 stadiums = 15,000 pes = 1 leauge = 4440 m
3 Myles of 5000 fote = 24 furlongs = 15,000 fote = 9375 English cubits = 1 leauge = 4440 m
3 Miles of 5280 feet = 24 furlongs = 15,840 feet = 9900 English cubits = 1 leauge = 4828 m
7.5 milliare = 1 schoeni = 1 kapsu = 2 parasang = 60 furlongs = 11.1 km = 1/10 degree
1 degree (eec) = 1 itrw = 10 schoeni = 20 parasangs = 600 furlongs = 21,000 royal cubits

Divisions of the Milos, Milliare, Myle and Mile into areas

Milos
1 square Milos of side 4800 pous = 1 Knights fee
64 square stadions of 360,000 square pous,
34,225 square meters, 368,554 SF
576 aroura of 40,000 square pous, 3802.78 square m, 40,950.46 SF
each aroura had a side of 200 pous divisible into 2 plethrons
each of the 2304 plethron in a square Milos had a side of 100 pous
2304 square plethrons of 10,000 square pous,
950.6 square meters 10,237.64 SF
640,000 square orquia of 36 square pous, 3.4 square meters, 36.85 SF
Milliare
1 square Milliare of side 5000 pes
64 square stadiums of 390,625 square pes,
34,225 square meters, 368,554 SF
25 square actus of side 1000 pes with 25 acres or 20 heridia
1 Heridia was 1.25 Roman acres so there were
20 Heridis to a square Actus
625 areas of 40,000 square pes, 3802.78 m, 40,950.46 SF
1.25 Roman acres is 50,000 pied = side 217.15 Ft area 47,154.54 SF
Each Jugerum was half a Heridium and Half a Jugerum was an acuna.
A Centuria was 100 Heredia or 125 acres or 5 square Actus
Myle
1 square Myle of side 5000 fote or 8 furlongs
64 square furlongs of side 625 square feet
in a square acre there were 40,000 square feet or fote
each acre had a side of 200 fote
In Roman Europe The Bodelian manuscript tells us
14 acres maketh a yerde of land
If those are Roman acres of 40,000 pied then
the yerde is 12 English acres
5 yerdis maketh a hyde of land which is 70 acres 60 English acres
8 hydis maketh a knights fee which is 560 acres of land
8 hydis = 480 English acres

The Confusion

the redefinition of the Greek Milos by the Romans and
The redefinition of the Milliare by the Elizabeathans, and
The redefinition of the Mile by the Metric system

Old English or Anglo Saxon units derived from the Greeks and Romans

The Virgate - "An old English unit of area" is actually Roman in origin
equal to one quarter of a hide = 1.25 yerdis = 17.5 acres
The amount of land needed to support a person.
The hide is at its root a German word for household, but
the hide is a Roman derived unit
We are told that in the Saxon counties of southern England,
it referred to the land sufficient to support one family,
which equaled what the family plowed in a year.
We are told that depending on the fertility of the land, the hide varied
from as little as 60 to as many as 240 acres, half a knights fee
but it was typically between 80 and 120 acres, 1/4 knights fee
Its actually 60 modern English, and 70 old Roman acres
We are told that the bovate is 1/8 of a carucate,
which also appears in the Domesday Book originated as a Danish measure
and it is found in the northeastern English counties
constituting the Danelaw.
Lets allow a carucata or carucate, like
1 hide, is approximately 120 acres and
like the bovate was found in the Danish counties.
Lets allow A Plowland or plowgate is equal to a carucate or
an area eight oxen can plow
sufficient for a free family to support itself;
its origins precede 1100. (see definitions of Sumerian areas)
We are told the plowland compares with the knight’s fee
which we have established originates with the Milos
which was a larger area sufficient to support a knight’s family
(perhaps to allow pasture for animal husbandry).
Sulung is a Kentish term for two hides.
Its 120 modern English, 140 Roman acres
A yoke in Kent is 1/4 of a sulung.
A virgate is a rod in linear measure and 1/4 of a hide
(or 30 acres) used as a measure of area in Saxon counties.
30 acres is 1/4 sulong
We have the Arpent AS a unit of length =~ 191.8 feet and
the (square) arpent used as a unit of area, area
(180 old French 'pied', or foot) used in France, Louisiana, and Canada.
approximately .845 acres, or 36,802 SF
Clearly derived from 1000 square orguia = 36,850 SF
which is itself derived from 1 sos = 10,000 square orguia.
We have the Morgen a unit of area =~ .6309 acres. or 27, 482 SF
used in Germany, Holland and South Africa, as 3/4 the Arpent
derived from the German word Morgen ("morning").
It represented the amount of land that could be plowed in a morning.

Ancient Definitions of Medieval Units

Mesopotamia
1 square iku = 10,000 SF
1 square great iku = 14,400 SF
1 square sos = 360,000 SF
Egypt
1 square khet = 21,780 SF
1 square st3t of remen = 15,064.64 SF
1 square st3t = 29,526.69 SF
Greece
1 square aroura = 40,950.46 SF
1 square plethron 10,237.64 SF
1 square orquia 36.85 SF
Rome
1 square actus 943,090.78 SF
1 square Centuria 4,715,454 SF
1 square Heridia 47,154.54 SF
1 square area 40,950.46 SF
1 square Jugerum 23,577.27 SF
1 square acuna 11788.63 SF

Anglo - Saxon use of Roman and Greek Units

1 Myle of 5000 fote became 1 Mile of 5280 feet in 1593
1 square Mile of side 5280 feet was now divided into 8 furlongs of 220 yards
where before it had been 8 stadium/furlongs of 625'
1 acre = 43,560 SF because it was increased by Queen Elizabeth
The side of each square furlong was increased 35'
The area that had been 8 Heridia of 1.25 acres or 9 acres was now divided into 10 acres
each acre measured a perch by a furlong
Each square furlong was half a square Actus
Each Jugerum was half a Heridium and Half a Jugerum was an acuna.
Each Furlong was 16 Jugerum and 32 acuna
A Centuria was 100 Heredia, 12.5 square furlongs
125 acres was 5 square Actus
in a square acre there were 40,000 square feet or fote
each square acre had a side of 200 feet

Longer Discussion

Stadios

The Greek root stadios means "to have standing"
"to have standing" means to be a landowner.
Land measures including both
length and area are based on the size of fields
The base units are the remen, pace, yard, orguia,
fathom, rod, cord, perche and furlong.
Body measures fingers, thumbs, palms, hands, fists, feet, forearms
are related and worked into the system as multiples of the foot.
Different classes of citizen and occupation are apportioned
different amounts of land by the community

Ancient Degree Based Stadia Standards of Measure

Ancient stadia measures were always divisions of the degree
Systemized standards of measure derived from this common standard
Mesopotamia used 600 sos of 180 m = 108 km
Egypt used 10 itrw = 700 "3ht or fields" (of 3 kht of 100 royal cubits) = 110.25 km
Persia used 20 parasangs of 30(furlongs = 185 m) = 111 km
Phoenicia used 500 stadions (of 750 feet = 185 m) = 111 km
Ptolomy and Marinus of Tyre measured in the Persian/Phoenician stadia
Eratosthenes measured in the 700 3ht of Egypt.
The Greeks used 600 stadions (of 600 pous of 308.4 mm) = 111 km
The Romans used 600 stadiums of 625 pes (of 296 mm = 111 km
All of those are accurate divisions of a degree as defined by Ptolomy
Ancient Europe used the same standards because it did business with the same people
The credit for the first systemized collection and standardization
probably goes to the empire builders of Mesopotamia and Egypt
but the international commerce of the people who benefited
by those great empires, the Greeks and Persians and the Romans
who followed them is what really required the system
be standardized over such vast areas.
The important thing to recognize is that you can identify the original source
as Mesopotamian or Egyptian depending on whether the system is sexigesimal
or septenary and whether the divisions are by palms or feet or both.

Egyptian Itrw and Atur

The Itrw is an hour of travel on the river = 21,000 royal cubits
The Atur is an hour of march on the land = 21,000 royal cubits
The minute of march is a unit of 1 minutes travel = 350 royal cubits
21,000 royal cubits = 36,085 English feet = 6.83 modern miles
It equaled 7.22 miles prior to the time of Queen Elizabeth
That was 11 km or 7.43 Roman milliare.
75 Roman milliare are a pretty good value for a degree
The Egyptian value for 10 itrw is a little less accurate
and that probably explains the correction.

Conversions between Mesopotamian and Other Systems

Much of the Egyptian system of measurement is based on the Mesopotamian.
The Egyptian system in its turn formed the basis of the later Greek and Roman systems
while they in turn influenced European Systems.
The Egyptians took a sexigesimal Mesopotamian system and converted it to a septenary Egyptian system by taking an ordinary cubit of five gat measuring 30 sheshi 25 uban(500 mm) and a great cubit of 6 gat measuring 30 uban (600 mm)and making the first 6 Šsp (6 palms with 24 db<= 450 mm) and the second 7 Šsp (palms with 28 db< = 525 mm).
There are generally two or more divisions by size of finger and thumb

and different cultures have a preference for different unit fractions but basically all of it is part of the same system.

Mesopotamian;
1 (little finger) = 1 "shusi" = 15 mm = 0.05 feet or podes
Greek;
1 (ring finger)= 1 daktylos = 19.275 mm = 0.06 feet or podes
Roman;
1.33 finger = 1 (thumb or inch)= 1 uncia = 25.64 mm = 0.08 feet or podes
Greek;
2 (daktylos)= 1 condylos = 38.55 mm = 0.13 feet or podes
Roman
4 (daktylos)= 1 palaiste = 77.10 mm = 0.25 feet or podes =(1 palm)
8 (daktylos)= 1 dichas = 154.20 mm = 0.51 feet or podes =(2 palms)
12 (daktylos)= 1 spithame = 231.30 0.76 feet or podes =(3 palms)
Greek;
16 (daktylos)= 1 pous = 308.40 mm =1.01 podes =(4 palms)
20 (daktylos)= 1 pygon = 385.50 mm =1.26 podes =(5 palms = 1 remen)
Roman
24 daktylos = 1 pechya = 462.60 mm = 1.52 podes =(6 palms = 1 cubit)
English;
25 (daktylos )= 1 English cubit = 493.44 mm = 1.62 podes;
Egyptian;
28 (daktylos )=~ 1 Egyptian royal cubit = 539.70 = 1.77 podes =(7 palms)

Land cubits and tenure, the Feudal system

The Mesopotamians measured their arable land in garden plots or sar and combined them into fields or iku of 100 cubits to a side. The Egyptians measured out the irrigation ditches that bounded their 3ht or fields as strips a cubit wide and 100 cubits long known as kht. Their st3t which was a field 100 cubits to a side is said to have become the Greek Aroura or thousand but when you run the numbers the Aroura seems more likely to have derived from the iku.
Its probable that farmers measured out the land their community allowed them to plow in return for digging the ditch by pacing it off and built up an enclosure for it with the stones they found in their furrows.
The community would give the fields out in pairs, one to be plowed and one to remain fallow which were planted in rotation. As beasts of burden were domesticated and yoked to the plow the amount of land under cultivation increased, and a third field was added to be planted in hay or fodder for the plow animal. The side of this cluster of fields became standardized at 350 cubits or one minute of march.

Where the Metric System came from

In 1670 Abbe Mouton suggested a primary length standard
equal to 1 minute of arc on a great circle of the earth.
For this basic length Mouton offered the name milliare.
This was to be subdivided by seven sub units with each one
to be 1/10 the length of the one preceeding or
Milliare = 1 minute of arc = 36524 English feet = 1.11 km
Centuria =.1 minute of arc = 3652.4 English feet = .111 km
Decuria = .01 minutes of arc = 365.24 English feet = 111.1 m
Virga = .001 minutes of arc = 36.524 English feet =11.1 m
Virgula = .0001 minutes of arc = 3.6524 English feet = 1.11 m
Decima = .00001 minute of arc = .36524 English feet = .111 m
Centesima = .000001 minute of arc .36524 = English feet = 113.25 mm
Millesima = .0000001 minute of arc .036524 = English feet = 11.325 mm
Abbe Mouton may or may not have known that
The Milos was based on a stadion equivalent to the Egyptian minute of march.
Sir Issac Newton who attempted to restablish the measures of the ancient world
from the math problems in Kings 1 may not have known that
But its certain that Jomard, one of the French savants accompanying Napoleon
to Egypt entrusted with the measurement of ancient architecture to attempt
to restablish the correct value of ancient measures by measurement
knew that because he cites the Greeks who knew that
"In 1798, Edme-Francois Jomard visited the Great Pyramid
as a young savant on Napoleon's expedition.
The French had the debris cleared away from
the two northern corners of the Pyramid and discovered the corner sockets
where the corner casing stones had apparently originally been placed.
These were ten by twelve foot mortises, perfectly level,
and perfectly level with each other, cut twenty inches into the limestone bedrock.
Although, there were still piles of rubble between them,
Jomard was able to measure the north side of the base to be 230.902 meters (757.5 feet).
For the height, he measured each step. They added up to a total of 144 meters (481 feet).
By means of trigonometry Jomard calculated a slope of 51* 19' 14", and
an apothem of 184.722 meters. Because the casing stones were missing,
these figures were both estimates, but the length of the apothem
looked virtually perfect in light of various ancient classical texts
which Jomard was familiar with."
Diodorus Siculus and Strabo both claimed that the apothem of the Great Pyramid
was one stadium long. The Olympic stadium was 600 Greek feet, and
was supposed to be related to the size of the earth.
Jomard found the stadium of Eratosthenes and Hipparchus to be 185.5 meters,
and thus within one meter of his figure for the apothem. He also found that
distances quoted by the ancients in stadia matched the distances found by
Napoleon's surveyors, if a stadium was taken to be 185 meters.
The ancient stadium was also reported to have been 1/600 of a degree.
When Jomard took the length of a degree at what he believed to be
the mean latitude of Egypt, 110,827.68 meters, and divided it by 600,
he arrived at a stadium of 184.712 meters, which was
within ten centimeters of his figure for the length of the apothem!
In addition, several Greek authors had reported that the perimeter
of the base was equal to half a minute of a degree.
This would mean that a degree of latitude divided by 480 should
equal the length of one side of the base.
Again Jomard used the length of a degree at his mean latitude of Egypt,
110,827 meters, and dividing by 480 arrived at 230.8 meters,
again within 10 centimeters of his measured base.

The Egyptian Minute of March as Stadion, Stadium, Furlong

In Egypt the minute of march was 350 royal cubits long and
an hour of march or itrw was 21,000 royal cubits long.
The Greeks tell us they noted their measures of 6 plethrons and 8 stadions,
were both the equivalent of the Apothem or slant side of the Great Pyramid.
The modern pre Euro nautical mile was ten times the length of that Apothem.
Using unit measures like the Stadion, Stadium and Furlong, which
were originally used to lay out fields and only gradually became defined as areas
like the Aroura or thousand square royal cubits, the empire builders
measured out their roads.
The Greek Milos was originally 8 stadions or 600 Greek pous x 8 = 4800 pous
The Pous came in long short and median variations so depending on which one
you used the number of pous would vary even as the length of the stadion and
Milos remained the same.
600 Attic pous were equal to 625 Ionian pous but
both stadions were 185 meters long
The Romans standard pes was the Ionian pous of 296 mm so
they made their stadium of 185 meters egual to 625 pes or 1000 passus and
that made their Milliare 5000 pes
What makes that a great system for empire builders is that
the passus is now a measure of the pace at which the army moves.
If such standards of measure are well suited to
controlling the movements of armies with milestones
related to how much distance can be covered in a set period of time
they are equally servicable to the needs of commerce.
Just as the farmer can use the stone walls that border his field
to help him restablish its boundaries after a flood,
the community can establish its bounds in terms of
how much land it needs to irrigate to sustain its population and
the lugal or narmr (chief farmer)can determine
how many men he needs to dig the irrigation system and
how much land to alot to each oinkos, gene and phratre
in return for their service. Its all very feudal.
The city state is based on a market or agora that
serves a number of communities which are
spaced about as far apart as a man can walk in a day
driving a team of oxen pulling a cart.
When it takes more days to get the goods to market
than it takes for the crops to spoil you need a new market.

Leauges and the Vestigal Remnant of ther English Cubit on the Stanley Tape Measure

The various leagues at ~4km also enters the picture, but these seem to have
a simple, pedestrian origin. The French league later connects it to the meridian.
Pull out your standard everyday run of the mill Stanly tape measure and you should
see a diamond at 19.2" That is the ancient ordinary English cubit and its
the basis of the English League of three modern miles or
anciently in the time when a mile was 8 furlongs of 600 feet,
14,400 ft and 9,000 diamonds.

Egil 13:49 Feb 13, 2003 (UTC)

I don't know about Goethe, but
Ole Rømer was a big player in the 4-minute geographical mile.
Elizabeth I added the 280 ft to make an 8-furlong mile.

Gene Nygaard 17:52, 4 Feb 2005 (UTC)

iku, 3kr, 3ht, kht, st3t, aroura, area, are, acre

She added the 280 feet to make a mile of 8 furlongs of 660 feet
be a mile of 80 perche instead of a mile of 8 furlongs of 625 feet.
The perche was not a Roman measure.
Trying to lay out a knights fee with a mile that measured 75.75 perche to a side
was what led to the confusion as to how many acres were in a hyde and yerde.
In a modern square mile there are 640 acres making 10 acres to a square furlong.
In the ancient square Milos there were 576 Aroura.
Greek Aroura would be measured with a side of 200 Attic pous of 308.4 mm.
That means there would have been 9 Aroura to a square stadion and
576 to a square Milos of 23040000 square pous.
Those would have been derived from
a Mesopotamian iku of 100 cubits of 600 mm rather than
a st3t with side 100 Egyptian royal cubits of +/- 525 mm.
An iku of side 100 great cubits of 600 mm has
a side of 196.85 modern English feet and
an area of 38750 SF. It would have had
a side of 202.7 Ionian pous or Roman pes of 296 mm
An Egyptian st3t with side 100 royal cubits
would measure 171.83 modern English feet to a side and
contain 29526.69 SF. While thats about half of a modern acre and
anciently fields were farmed in pairs that's 169.83 Attic pous and
With 28841.37 square pous not enough square pous in an Aroura
to multiply out to a square mile of 4800 pous to a side.
When people began to harness domestic animals to the plow
they added a third field which probably became
the basis for the Roman jugerum.
The above questions are very old, and I have found some answers
I have yet found no clear connection between
the Egyptian mile (river measure) and anything else,
The Egyptian minute of march is 350 royal cubits.
The itrw is 60 minutes of march or a one hour river journey and
measures 21,000 royal cubits.
The key to understanding Egyptian measures is that they are septenary
and based on multiples of the palm rather than multiples of the hand.
but the Persian parasang is also interesting.

Herodotus on the length of ancient measures

For that you go to Herodotus (and Ptolomy)
Herodotus explains that the Persian stadia are 500 to a degree
rather than 600 so their stadion is 222 meters rather than 185 and
based on 750 Persian feet rather than 600 Greek feet.
The geographical ~7.5 km mile, land and sea, is the brainchild of Ole Rømer - the Prussian king later adopting it.


VI. Further, the length of the seacoast of Egypt itself is sixty “schoeni”1 --of Egypt, that is, as we judge it to be, reaching from the Plinthinete gulf to the Serbonian marsh, which is under the Casian mountain--between these there is this length of sixty schoeni. [2] Men that have scant land measure by feet; those that have more, by miles; those that have much land, by parasangs; and those who have great abundance of it, by schoeni. [3] The parasang is three and three quarters miles, and the schoenus, which is an Egyptian measure, is twice that.
VII. By this reckoning, then, the seaboard of Egypt will be four hundred and fifty miles in length. Inland from the sea as far as Heliopolis, Egypt is a wide land, all flat and watery and marshy. From the sea up to Heliopolis is a journey about as long as the way from the altar of the twelve gods at Athens to the temple of Olympian Zeus at Pisa. [2] If a reckoning is made, only a little difference of length, not more than two miles, will be found between these two journeys; for the journey from Athens to Pisa is two miles short of two hundred, which is the number of miles between the sea and Heliopolis.
IX. From Heliopolis to Thebes is nine days' journey by river, and the distance is six hundred and eight miles, or eighty-one schoeni. [2] This, then, is a full statement of all the distances in Egypt: the seaboard is four hundred and fifty miles long; and I will now declare the distance inland from the sea to Thebes : it is seven hundred and sixty-five miles. And between Thebes and the city called Elephantine there are two hundred and twenty-five miles.
81 schoeni = 608 miles
1 schoeni = 7.5miles = 1/10 degree = 11.1 km

Parasan = 30 furlongs


The British nautical mile may have been due to a want of having a sea mile in the same order of magnitude as their land mile? The relationship between the Roman and British land miles are, as you note, well documented. -- Egil 08:48, 9 Feb 2005 (UTC)