Weather friar
The Weather friar, is an absorption hygrometer created by Agapito Borràs Pedemonte in 1894.
History
Origin
Borràs a native of Calella, constructed the Weather friar, when he was barely 18 years old in 1894 after studying several books on recreational physics, giving this and other gadgets made by him to his friends; The Weather friar caught the attention of some businessmen from Arenys de Mar, who convinced Borràs to market it for an initial price of 80 pesetas, this being the seed of one of the most famous toy companies in Spain : Juguetes Borrás. This company would finally merge with Educa Sallent in 2001, creating the new brand Educa Borrás, although the Weather friar was left out of the merger, which is why today the company in charge of its manufacturing and distribution is Tot Ideas S.L., founded by Borràs around 1906 in Mataró, a place where he had moved, taking advantage of the commercial boom derived from the Barcelona-Mataró railway line, the first inaugurated in European-Spain. Currently the company is directed by Enric Borrás, great-grandson of Agapito Borràs, and sells about 40,000 Weather friars around the world at a price of approximately 24 euros.Precedents
Although "the Weather friar" has been sometimes wrongly cited as the oldest hygrometer-meteorologist in the world, there is a similar hygrometer, with the shape of a Capuchin friar as well, from the late 18th century, in the Museum of Arts and Crafts in Paris, built by Charles Alexandre Clair and belonging to the physics office of Jacques Charles, who would bequeath his collection of gadgets to the State on January 15, 1792, with the National Assembly preparing an inventory of it where the existence of this object, very popular circa 1842, according to the first volume of the book Maison rustique du XIXe siècle, Encyclopédie d'Agriculture pratique, published under the direction of the scientific popularizer Charles-François Bailly de Merlieux, where a hygrometer is also mentioned in which the image of a Turk moves a saber to indicate the weather, similar to the friar moving the pointer and the hood of the habit. Similarly, at the Palaiseau Polytechnic School there is a hair hygrometer from 1809 in which a female figure moves her right arm to indicate on a scale the amount of water vapor in the air, dating the use of human hair to measure humidity to the year 1775, when Horace-Bénédict de Saussure decided has used it to develop what is considered the first precise hygrometer. By the way, Santorio Santorio had already described a thread hygrometer in 1623. Likewise, an illustration of two hygrometers represented respectively by the figures of a monk and a cat stands out in Arthur Mangin's book L'air et le monde aérien, both described as popular hygrometers. There was a clear tendency in the xix century to have hygrometers with decorative drawings in homes, especially in rural areas as an aid to the peasantry's work.Description
The hygrometer, made of cardboard, shows a figure consisting of a friar of the Capuchin Order with an open book in his right hand and the left arm and the hood of the habit mobile thanks to balanced axes; In this arm he carries a bar thanks to which he indicates the weather approximately 24 hours in advance on various signs arranged from top to bottom on a column while he moves his hood to reveal his head when it is hot or to cover it when rain threatens, including the weather conditions "dry", "rough", "wind", "good", "unsafe", "windy", "wet" and "rain", with the friar's functions illustrated in the following verses that accompany the contraption:| Original text | Translation |
| ¿Qué tiempo hará mañana? El Fraile te lo dirá. Su varita atentamente cada día observarás. Si a lo alto se encamina, tiempo seco encontrarás. Si hacia abajo se dirige, lluvia segura tendrás. Y mira bien su capucha, no te vayas a mojar. | How will be tomorrow's weather ? The good Friar is going to tell His wand with closed attention every day you should observe. If he points towards the top much dry weather you will find. If he points towards the base lots of rain you'l surely have. And observe right at his hood, to avoid just getting wet |