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Stone (unit)

The stone or stone weight (abbreviation: st.)[1] is an English and British imperial unit of mass equal to 14 pounds (6.35 kg).[nb 1] The stone continues in customary use in the United Kingdom for body weight.

Stone
A 16th-century bronze 1 stone weight emblazoned with the English coat of arms
General information
Unit systemBritish imperial
Unit ofMass
Abbreviationst

England and other Germanic-speaking countries of Northern Europe formerly used various standardised "stones" for trade, with their values ranging from about 5 to 40 local pounds (roughly 3 to 15 kg) depending on the location and objects weighed. With the advent of metrication, Europe's various "stones" were superseded by or adapted to the kilogram from the mid-19th century on.

Antiquity edit

 
Stone weight with Darius the Great–era tri-lingual inscription. 9,950g
 
The Eschborn Museum's 2nd-century stone weight of 40 Roman pounds (c. 13 kg), beside an ID-1-sized card for scale

The name "stone" derives from the use of stones for weights, a practice that dates back into antiquity. The Biblical law against the carrying of "diverse weights, a large and a small"[7] is more literally translated as "you shall not carry a stone and a stone (אבן ואבן), a large and a small". There was no standardised "stone" in the ancient Jewish world,[8] but in Roman times stone weights were crafted to multiples of the Roman pound.[9] Such weights varied in quality: the Yale Medical Library holds 10 and 50-pound examples of polished serpentine,[10] while a 40-pound example at the Eschborn Museum is made of sandstone.[11]

Great Britain and Ireland edit

The 1772 edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica defined the stone:[12]

STONE also denotes a certain quantity or weight of some commodities. A stone of beef, in London, is the quantity of eight pounds; in Hertfordshire, twelve pounds; in Scotland sixteen pounds.

The Weights and Measures Act of 1824, which applied to all of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, consolidated the weights and measures legislation of several centuries into a single document. It revoked the provision that bales of wool should be made up of 20 stones, each of 14 pounds, but made no provision for the continued use of the stone. Ten years later, a stone still varied from 5 pounds (glass) to 8 pounds (meat and fish) to 14 pounds (wool and "horseman's weight").[13] The Act of 1835 permitted using a stone of 14 pounds for trade[14] but other values remained in use. James Britten, in 1880 for example, catalogued a number of different values of the stone in various British towns and cities, ranging from 4 lb to 26 lb.[15] The value of the stone and associated units of measure that were legalised for purposes of trade were clarified by the Weights and Measures Act 1835 as follows:[14]

Equivalent
in pounds
Name of unit Equivalent
in stone
Approx.
equivalent
in kg
1 1 pound 114 0.4536
14 1 stone 1 6.350
28 1 quarter 2 12.70
112 1 hundredweight 8 50.80
2,240 1 (long) ton 160 1,016

England edit

The English stone under law varied by commodity and in practice varied according to local standards. The Assize of Weights and Measures, a statute of uncertain date from c. 1300, describes stones of 5 merchants' pounds used for glass; stones of 8 lb. used for beeswax, sugar, pepper, alum, cumin, almonds,[16] cinnamon, and nutmegs;[17] stones of 12 lb. used for lead; and the London stone of 12+12 lb. used for wool.[16][17] In 1350 Edward III issued a new statute defining the stone weight, to be used for wool and "other Merchandizes", at 14 pounds,[nb 2] reaffirmed by Henry VII in 1495.[19]

 
A nineteenth-century slide rule for estimating cattle carcass weights, calibrated in stones of 20, 17+12, 8 and 14 pounds[20]

In England, merchants traditionally sold potatoes in half-stone increments of 7 pounds. Live animals were weighed in stones of 14 lb; but, once slaughtered, their carcasses were weighed in stones of 8 lb. Thus, if the animal's carcass accounted for 814 of the animal's weight, the butcher could return the dressed carcasses to the animal's owner stone for stone, keeping the offal, blood and hide as his due for slaughtering and dressing the animal.[21] Smithfield market continued to use the 8 lb stone for meat until shortly before the Second World War.[22] The Oxford English Dictionary also lists:[23]

Commodity Number of pounds
Wool 14, 15, 24
Wax 12
Sugar and spice 8
Beef and mutton 8

Scotland edit

The Scottish stone was equal to 16 Scottish pounds (17 lb 8 oz avoirdupois or 7.936 kg). In 1661, the Royal Commission of Scotland recommended that the Troy stone be used as a standard of weight and that it be kept in the custody of the burgh of Lanark. The tron (or local) stone of Edinburgh, also standardised in 1661, was 16 tron pounds (22 lb 1 oz avoirdupois or 9.996 kg).[24][25] In 1789 an encyclopedic enumeration of measurements was printed for the use of "his Majesty's Sheriffs and Stewards Depute, and Justices of Peace, ... and to the Magistrates of the Royal Boroughs of Scotland" and provided a county-by-county and commodity-by-commodity breakdown of values and conversions for the stone and other measures.[26] The Scots stone ceased to be used for trade when the Act of 1824 established a uniform system of measure across the whole of the United Kingdom, which at that time included all of Ireland.[27]

Ireland edit

Before the early 19th century, as in England, the stone varied both with locality and with commodity. For example, the Belfast stone for measuring flax equaled 16.75 avoirdupois pounds.[28] The most usual value was 14 pounds.[29] Among the oddities related to the use of the stone was the practice in County Clare of a stone of potatoes being 16 lb in the summer and 18 lb in the winter.[29]

Modern use edit

In 1965, the Federation of British Industry informed the British government that its members favoured adopting the metric system. The Board of Trade, on behalf of the government, agreed to support a ten-year metrication programme. There would be minimal legislation, as the programme was to be voluntary and costs were to be borne where they fell.[30] Under the guidance of the Metrication Board, the agricultural product markets achieved a voluntary switchover by 1976.[31] The stone was not included in the Directive 80/181/EEC as a unit of measure that could be used within the EEC for "economic, public health, public safety or administrative purposes",[32] though its use as a "supplementary unit" was permitted. The scope of the directive was extended to include all aspects of the EU internal market from 1 January 2010.[33]

With the adoption of metric units by the agricultural sector, the stone was, in practice, no longer used for trade; and, in the Weights and Measures Act 1985, passed in compliance with EU directive 80/181/EEC,[32] the stone was removed from the list of units permitted for trade in the United Kingdom.[34][35][36] In 1983, in response to the same directive, similar legislation was passed in Ireland.[37] The Act repealed earlier acts that defined the stone as a unit of measure for trade.[36] (British law had previously been silent regarding other uses of the stone.)

The stone remains widely used in the United Kingdom and Ireland for human body weight: in those countries people may commonly be said to weigh, e.g., "11 stone 4" (11 stones and 4 pounds), rather than "72 kilograms" or "158 pounds", the conventional way of expressing the same weight in the United States.[38] The invariant plural form of stone in this context is stone (as in, "11 stone" or "12 stone 6 pounds"); in other contexts, the correct plural is stones (as in, "Please enter your weight in stones and pounds"). In Australia and New Zealand, metrication has entirely displaced stones and pounds since the 1970s.

In many sports in both the United Kingdom and Ireland, such as professional boxing, wrestling, and horse racing,[39] the stone is used to express body weights.

Elsewhere edit

The use of the stone in the British Empire was varied. In Canada for example, it never had a legal status.[40] Shortly after the United States declared independence, Thomas Jefferson, then Secretary of State, presented a report on weights and measures to the U.S. House of Representatives. Even though all the weights and measures in use in the United States at the time were derived from English weights and measures, his report made no mention of the stone being used. He did, however, propose a decimal system of weights in which his "[decimal] pound" would have been 9.375 ounces (265.8 g) and the "[decimal] stone" would have been 5.8595 pounds (2.6578 kg).[41]

 
A depiction of a medieval German scale weighing bales of wool according to the local stone.

Before the advent of metrication, units called "stone" (German: Stein; Dutch: steen; Polish: kamień) were used in many northwestern European countries.[42][43] Its value, usually between 3 and 10 kg, varied from city to city and sometimes from commodity to commodity. The number of local "pounds" in a stone also varied from city to city. During the early 19th century, states such as the Netherlands (including Belgium) and the South Western German states, which had redefined their system of measures using the kilogramme des Archives as a reference for weight (mass), also redefined their stone to align it with the kilogram.

This table shows a selection of stones from various northern European cities:

City Modern country Term used Weight of
stone in
kilograms
Weight of
stone in
local pounds
Comments
Dresden[44] Germany Stein 10.15 22 Before 1841
10.0 20 From 1841 onwards
Germany schwerer Stein 10.296 22 heavy stone
leichter Stein 5.148 11 light stone
  • Poland
  • Russia
großer Stein 15.444 33 large stone
kleiner Stein 10.296 22 small stone
Bremen[44] Germany Stein Flachs 9.97 20 stone of flax
Stein Wolle und Federn 4.985 10 stone of wool and feathers
Oldenburg[44] Germany Stein Flachs 9.692 20 stone of flax
Stein Wolle und Federn 4.846 10 stone of wool and feathers
Kraków[44] Poland Stein 10.137 25
Osnabrück[44] Germany Stein 4.941 10
Amsterdam[44] Netherlands steen 3.953 8 Before 1817
3 6 "Metric stone" (after 1817)
Karlsruhe[44] Germany Stein 5.00 10
Germany Stein 10.287 22
Breslau (Wrocław)[44] Poland Stein 9.732 24
Antwerp[44] Belgium steen 3.761 8
Prague[45] Czech Republic kámen/Stein 10.29 20
Solothurn[44] Switzerland Stein 5.184 10
Stockholm[45] Sweden sten 13.60 32 (32 Skålpund)
Warsaw[45] Poland kamień 10.14 25
Vilnius[45] Lithuania kamieni 14.992 40
Vienna[45] Austria Stein 11.20 20

Metric stone edit

In the Netherlands, where the metric system was adopted in 1817, the pond (pound) was set equal to half a kilogram, and the steen (stone), which had previously been 8 Amsterdam pond (3.953 kg), was redefined as being 3 kg.[43] In modern colloquial Dutch, a pond is used as an alternative for 500 grams or half a kilogram, while the ons is used for a weight of 100 grams, being 15 pond.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Per the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement,[2][3][4][5] adopted by the United Kingdom in 1963.[6] Prior to that agreement, various minor differences existed between national standards and their conversions to the metric system.
  2. ^ "that every Person do sell and buy by the Balance, so that the Balance be even, and the Woolls and other Merchandizes evenly weighed by the right Weight, so that the Sack of Wooll weigh no more but 26 Stones, and every Stone to weigh 14 l. [pounds] and that the Beam of the Balance do not bow more to the one Part than to the other; (3) and that the Weight be according to the Standard of the Exchequer. (4) And if any Buyer do the contrary, he shall be grievously punished, as well at the Suit of the Party, as at the Suit of our Lord the King."[18]

References edit

  1. ^ "stone", Concise Oxford Dictionary, Oxford University Press, 1964.
  2. ^ United States. National Bureau of Standards (1959). Research Highlights of the National Bureau of Standards. U.S. Department of Commerce, National Bureau of Standards. p. 13.
  3. ^ National Bureau of Standards, Appendix 8 2009-01-18 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ National Physical Laboratory, P. H. Bigg & al. Re-determination of the values of the imperial standard pound and of its parliamentary copies in terms of the international kilogramme during the years 1960 and 1961
  5. ^ Sizes.com: pound avoirdupois.
  6. ^ Weights and Measures Act of 1963.
  7. ^ Deuteronomy 25:13
  8. ^ The Pictorial Bible; being the Old and New Testaments according to the Authorised Version ... to which are added Original Notes. London: Charles Knight & Co. 1836.
  9. ^ de Montfaucon, Bernard; Humphreys, David (1722). Antiquity explained, and represented in sculptures, Volumes 3-4. London. pp. 107–109.
  10. ^ for example:
    Kisch, Bruno (1956). "Two Remarkable Roman Stone Weights in the Edward C. Streeter Collection at the Yale Medical Library". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. XI (1): 97–100. doi:10.1093/jhmas/xi.1.97. PMID 13295580.
  11. ^ A Roman stone weight of 40 librae is on exhibition in the Eschborn town museum (Germany). Retrieved 12 March 2012
  12. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica Vol III, Edinburgh – 1772.
  13. ^ Gregory, Olinthus (1834). Mathematics for Practical Men. Philadelphia: E. L. Carey and A. Hart. pp. 21.
  14. ^ a b Poppy, TG (4 June 1957). "The Development of Weights and Measures Control in the United Kingdom". Report of the National Conference on Weights and Measures, Volumes 41-45. Forty-second National Conference on Weights and Measures. Washington DC: US Department of Commerce – National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). pp. 22–34.
  15. ^ Zupko, Ronald Edward (1985). A Dictionary of Weights and Measures for the British Isles. Vol. 168. American Philosophical Society. pp. 391–398. ISBN 9780871691682.
  16. ^ a b Ruffhead, Owen, ed. (1763a), The Statutes at Large, vol.  I: From Magna Charta to the End of the Reign of King Henry the Sixth. To which is prefixed, A Table of the Titles of all the Publick and Private Statutes during that Time, London: Mark Basket for the Crown, pp. 148–149. (in English) & (in Latin) & (in Norman)
  17. ^ a b Statutes of the Realm, vol. I, London: G. Eyre & A. Strahan, 1810, p. 204
  18. ^ 25 Edward III st. 5 c. 9.
  19. ^ 11 Hen. VII c. 4 §2 (1495).
  20. ^ A Cyclopedia of Agriculture, Practical and Scientific, vol. 2, Blackie and son, 1855, pp. 417–419
  21. ^ Newman, LF (December 1954). "Weights and Measures". Folklore. Folklore Enterprises Ltd. 65 (3/4): 138. doi:10.1080/0015587x.1954.9717437. JSTOR 1259240. S2CID 165541893.
  22. ^ "Meat Prices". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). United Kingdom: House of Lords. 1 March 1938. col. 901–902.
  23. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, 1st ed. "stone, n., §14a". Oxford University Press (Oxford), 1917.
  24. ^ "Scottish Weights and Measures: Weight". SCAN Weights and Measures Guide: Background information about Scottish weights and measures. Scottish Archive Network. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  25. ^ "Scottish Weights and Measures: Background". SCAN Weights and Measures Guide: Background information about Scottish weights and measures. Scottish Archive Network. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  26. ^ A Proposal for Uniformity of Weights and Measures in Scotland by Execution of Laws Now in Force. Edinburgh: Peter Hill. 1789.
  27. ^ Mairi Robinson, ed. (2005) [1985]. "Appendix – Scottish Currency, Weights and Measures". Concise Scots Dictionary. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press Ltd. p. 817. ISBN 1-902930-00-2.
  28. ^ Chaney, Henry J. (1897). Our Weights and Measures. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode. pp. 24.
  29. ^ a b Edward Wakefield (1812). An account of Ireland, statistical and political. Vol. II. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown. pp. 197–202al.
  30. ^ "White Paper on Metrication (1972) – Summary and Conclusions" (PDF). London: Department of Trade and Industry Consumer and Competition Policy Directorate. para 42–455.
  31. ^ "Final Report of the Metrication Board (1980)" (PDF). London: Department of Trade and Industry Consumer and Competition Policy Directorate. Appendix A.
  32. ^ a b The Council of the European Communities (21 December 1979). "Council Directive 80/181/EEC of 20 December 1979 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to Unit of measurement and on the repeal of Directive 71/354/EEC". Retrieved 7 February 2009.
  33. ^ The Council of the European Communities (27 May 2009). "Council Directive 80/181/EEC of 20 December 1979 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to Unit of measurement and on the repeal of Directive 71/354/EEC". Retrieved 14 September 2009.
  34. ^ legislation.gov.uk: Weights and Measures Act 1985 Retrieved 2013-01-17.
  35. ^ Fenna, Donald (ed.), A Dictionary of Weights, Measures, and Units, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  36. ^ a b "Weights and Measures Act 1985", legislation.gov.uk, The National Archives, 1985 c. 72
  37. ^ "S.I. No. 235/1983 – European Communities (Units of Measurement) Regulations, 1983". Office of the Attorney General. Retrieved 28 June 2012.
  38. ^ Christine Hopkins, Ann Pope, Sandy Pepperell (2013). "Understanding Primary Mathematics". p. 195. Routledge.
  39. ^ "HRI Directives" (PDF). Ballymany, Curragh, Co Kildare: Horse Racing, Ireland. Retrieved 21 July 2012.
  40. ^ MacLean, RW (4 June 1957). "A Central Program for Weights and Measures Canada". Report of the National Conference on Weights and Measures, Volumes 41–45. Forty-second National Conference on Weights and Measures. Washington DC: US Department of Commerce – National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). pp. 44–49.
  41. ^ Jefferson, Thomas (13 July 1790). "Plan for Establishing Uniformity in the Coinage, Weights, and Measures of the United States".
  42. ^ Bartlett, James (1911). "Stone" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 958–960, see page 958, end of first para. The " stone " has been a common measure of weight in north-western Europe. In Germany....
  43. ^ a b Doursther, Horace (1840). Dictionnaire universel des poids et mesures anciens et modernes. Bruxelles: M. Hayez. p. 424. liege.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Noback, Christian; Noback, Friedrich Eduard (1851). Vollständiges Taschenbuch der Münz-, Maass- und Gewichts-Verhältnisse [etc.] aller Länder und Handelsplätze [Comprehensive pocketbook of money, weights and measures for all counties and trading centres] (in German). Vol. I. Leipzig: F. А. Brockhaus.
  45. ^ a b c d e f Noback, Christian; Noback, Friedrich Eduard (1851). Vollständiges tasehenbuch der Münz-, Maass- und Gewichts-Verhältnisse etc. aller Länder und Handelsplätze [Comprehensive pocketbook of money, weights and measures for all counties and trading centres] (in German). Vol. II. Leipzig: F. А. Brockhaus.

External links edit

  • UK: The Units of Measurement Regulations 1995
  • "Stone" entry on the Encyclopædia Britannica

stone, unit, this, article, about, european, unit, mass, asian, uses, stone, picul, material, made, rock, rock, geology, other, uses, word, stone, stone, disambiguation, stone, stone, weight, abbreviation, english, british, imperial, unit, mass, equal, pounds,. This article is about the European unit of mass For Asian uses of stone see Picul For the material made of rock see Rock geology For other uses of the word Stone see Stone disambiguation The stone or stone weight abbreviation st 1 is an English and British imperial unit of mass equal to 14 pounds 6 35 kg nb 1 The stone continues in customary use in the United Kingdom for body weight StoneA 16th century bronze 1 stone weight emblazoned with the English coat of armsGeneral informationUnit systemBritish imperialUnit ofMassAbbreviationstEngland and other Germanic speaking countries of Northern Europe formerly used various standardised stones for trade with their values ranging from about 5 to 40 local pounds roughly 3 to 15 kg depending on the location and objects weighed With the advent of metrication Europe s various stones were superseded by or adapted to the kilogram from the mid 19th century on Contents 1 Antiquity 2 Great Britain and Ireland 2 1 England 2 2 Scotland 2 3 Ireland 2 4 Modern use 3 Elsewhere 4 Metric stone 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksAntiquity edit nbsp Stone weight with Darius the Great era tri lingual inscription 9 950g nbsp The Eschborn Museum s 2nd century stone weight of 40 Roman pounds c 13 kg beside an ID 1 sized card for scaleThe name stone derives from the use of stones for weights a practice that dates back into antiquity The Biblical law against the carrying of diverse weights a large and a small 7 is more literally translated as you shall not carry a stone and a stone אבן ואבן a large and a small There was no standardised stone in the ancient Jewish world 8 but in Roman times stone weights were crafted to multiples of the Roman pound 9 Such weights varied in quality the Yale Medical Library holds 10 and 50 pound examples of polished serpentine 10 while a 40 pound example at the Eschborn Museum is made of sandstone 11 Great Britain and Ireland editThe 1772 edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica defined the stone 12 STONE also denotes a certain quantity or weight of some commodities A stone of beef in London is the quantity of eight pounds in Hertfordshire twelve pounds in Scotland sixteen pounds The Weights and Measures Act of 1824 which applied to all of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland consolidated the weights and measures legislation of several centuries into a single document It revoked the provision that bales of wool should be made up of 20 stones each of 14 pounds but made no provision for the continued use of the stone Ten years later a stone still varied from 5 pounds glass to 8 pounds meat and fish to 14 pounds wool and horseman s weight 13 The Act of 1835 permitted using a stone of 14 pounds for trade 14 but other values remained in use James Britten in 1880 for example catalogued a number of different values of the stone in various British towns and cities ranging from 4 lb to 26 lb 15 The value of the stone and associated units of measure that were legalised for purposes of trade were clarified by the Weights and Measures Act 1835 as follows 14 Equivalentin pounds Name of unit Equivalentin stone Approx equivalentin kg1 1 pound 1 14 0 453614 1 stone 1 6 35028 1 quarter 2 12 70112 1 hundredweight 8 50 802 240 1 long ton 160 1 016England edit The English stone under law varied by commodity and in practice varied according to local standards The Assize of Weights and Measures a statute of uncertain date from c 1300 describes stones of 5 merchants pounds used for glass stones of 8 lb used for beeswax sugar pepper alum cumin almonds 16 cinnamon and nutmegs 17 stones of 12 lb used for lead and the London stone of 12 1 2 lb used for wool 16 17 In 1350 Edward III issued a new statute defining the stone weight to be used for wool and other Merchandizes at 14 pounds nb 2 reaffirmed by Henry VII in 1495 19 nbsp A nineteenth century slide rule for estimating cattle carcass weights calibrated in stones of 20 17 1 2 8 and 14 pounds 20 In England merchants traditionally sold potatoes in half stone increments of 7 pounds Live animals were weighed in stones of 14 lb but once slaughtered their carcasses were weighed in stones of 8 lb Thus if the animal s carcass accounted for 8 14 of the animal s weight the butcher could return the dressed carcasses to the animal s owner stone for stone keeping the offal blood and hide as his due for slaughtering and dressing the animal 21 Smithfield market continued to use the 8 lb stone for meat until shortly before the Second World War 22 The Oxford English Dictionary also lists 23 Commodity Number of poundsWool 14 15 24Wax 12Sugar and spice 8Beef and mutton 8Scotland edit The Scottish stone was equal to 16 Scottish pounds 17 lb 8 oz avoirdupois or 7 936 kg In 1661 the Royal Commission of Scotland recommended that the Troy stone be used as a standard of weight and that it be kept in the custody of the burgh of Lanark The tron or local stone of Edinburgh also standardised in 1661 was 16 tron pounds 22 lb 1 oz avoirdupois or 9 996 kg 24 25 In 1789 an encyclopedic enumeration of measurements was printed for the use of his Majesty s Sheriffs and Stewards Depute and Justices of Peace and to the Magistrates of the Royal Boroughs of Scotland and provided a county by county and commodity by commodity breakdown of values and conversions for the stone and other measures 26 The Scots stone ceased to be used for trade when the Act of 1824 established a uniform system of measure across the whole of the United Kingdom which at that time included all of Ireland 27 Ireland edit Before the early 19th century as in England the stone varied both with locality and with commodity For example the Belfast stone for measuring flax equaled 16 75 avoirdupois pounds 28 The most usual value was 14 pounds 29 Among the oddities related to the use of the stone was the practice in County Clare of a stone of potatoes being 16 lb in the summer and 18 lb in the winter 29 Modern use edit In 1965 the Federation of British Industry informed the British government that its members favoured adopting the metric system The Board of Trade on behalf of the government agreed to support a ten year metrication programme There would be minimal legislation as the programme was to be voluntary and costs were to be borne where they fell 30 Under the guidance of the Metrication Board the agricultural product markets achieved a voluntary switchover by 1976 31 The stone was not included in the Directive 80 181 EEC as a unit of measure that could be used within the EEC for economic public health public safety or administrative purposes 32 though its use as a supplementary unit was permitted The scope of the directive was extended to include all aspects of the EU internal market from 1 January 2010 33 With the adoption of metric units by the agricultural sector the stone was in practice no longer used for trade and in the Weights and Measures Act 1985 passed in compliance with EU directive 80 181 EEC 32 the stone was removed from the list of units permitted for trade in the United Kingdom 34 35 36 In 1983 in response to the same directive similar legislation was passed in Ireland 37 The Act repealed earlier acts that defined the stone as a unit of measure for trade 36 British law had previously been silent regarding other uses of the stone The stone remains widely used in the United Kingdom and Ireland for human body weight in those countries people may commonly be said to weigh e g 11 stone 4 11 stones and 4 pounds rather than 72 kilograms or 158 pounds the conventional way of expressing the same weight in the United States 38 The invariant plural form of stone in this context is stone as in 11 stone or 12 stone 6 pounds in other contexts the correct plural is stones as in Please enter your weight in stones and pounds In Australia and New Zealand metrication has entirely displaced stones and pounds since the 1970s In many sports in both the United Kingdom and Ireland such as professional boxing wrestling and horse racing 39 the stone is used to express body weights Elsewhere editThe use of the stone in the British Empire was varied In Canada for example it never had a legal status 40 Shortly after the United States declared independence Thomas Jefferson then Secretary of State presented a report on weights and measures to the U S House of Representatives Even though all the weights and measures in use in the United States at the time were derived from English weights and measures his report made no mention of the stone being used He did however propose a decimal system of weights in which his decimal pound would have been 9 375 ounces 265 8 g and the decimal stone would have been 5 8595 pounds 2 6578 kg 41 nbsp A depiction of a medieval German scale weighing bales of wool according to the local stone Before the advent of metrication units called stone German Stein Dutch steen Polish kamien were used in many northwestern European countries 42 43 Its value usually between 3 and 10 kg varied from city to city and sometimes from commodity to commodity The number of local pounds in a stone also varied from city to city During the early 19th century states such as the Netherlands including Belgium and the South Western German states which had redefined their system of measures using the kilogramme des Archives as a reference for weight mass also redefined their stone to align it with the kilogram This table shows a selection of stones from various northern European cities City Modern country Term used Weight ofstone inkilograms Weight ofstone inlocal pounds CommentsDresden 44 Germany Stein 10 15 22 Before 184110 0 20 From 1841 onwardsMecklenburg Strelitz 44 Berlin 44 Germany schwerer Stein 10 296 22 heavy stoneleichter Stein 5 148 11 light stoneDanzig Gdansk 44 Konigsberg Kaliningrad 44 PolandRussia grosser Stein 15 444 33 large stonekleiner Stein 10 296 22 small stoneBremen 44 Germany Stein Flachs 9 97 20 stone of flaxStein Wolle und Federn 4 985 10 stone of wool and feathersOldenburg 44 Germany Stein Flachs 9 692 20 stone of flaxStein Wolle und Federn 4 846 10 stone of wool and feathersKrakow 44 Poland Stein 10 137 25Osnabruck 44 Germany Stein 4 941 10Amsterdam 44 Netherlands steen 3 953 8 Before 18173 6 Metric stone after 1817 Karlsruhe 44 Germany Stein 5 00 10Leipzig 44 Weimar 45 Germany Stein 10 287 22Breslau Wroclaw 44 Poland Stein 9 732 24Antwerp 44 Belgium steen 3 761 8Prague 45 Czech Republic kamen Stein 10 29 20Solothurn 44 Switzerland Stein 5 184 10Stockholm 45 Sweden sten 13 60 32 32 Skalpund Warsaw 45 Poland kamien 10 14 25Vilnius 45 Lithuania kamieni 14 992 40Vienna 45 Austria Stein 11 20 20Metric stone editIn the Netherlands where the metric system was adopted in 1817 the pond pound was set equal to half a kilogram and the steen stone which had previously been 8 Amsterdam pond 3 953 kg was redefined as being 3 kg 43 In modern colloquial Dutch a pond is used as an alternative for 500 grams or half a kilogram while the ons is used for a weight of 100 grams being 1 5 pond See also editEnglish imperial and German units of measurement Sack a unit of wool equal to 28 stoneNotes edit Per the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement 2 3 4 5 adopted by the United Kingdom in 1963 6 Prior to that agreement various minor differences existed between national standards and their conversions to the metric system that every Person do sell and buy by the Balance so that the Balance be even and the Woolls and other Merchandizes evenly weighed by the right Weight so that the Sack of Wooll weigh no more but 26 Stones and every Stone to weigh 14 l pounds and that the Beam of the Balance do not bow more to the one Part than to the other 3 and that the Weight be according to the Standard of the Exchequer 4 And if any Buyer do the contrary he shall be grievously punished as well at the Suit of the Party as at the Suit of our Lord the King 18 References edit stone Concise Oxford Dictionary Oxford University Press 1964 United States National Bureau of Standards 1959 Research Highlights of the National Bureau of Standards U S Department of Commerce National Bureau of Standards p 13 National Bureau of Standards Appendix 8 Archived 2009 01 18 at the Wayback Machine National Physical Laboratory P H Bigg amp al Re determination of the values of the imperial standard pound and of its parliamentary copies in terms of the international kilogramme during the years 1960 and 1961 Sizes com pound avoirdupois Weights and Measures Act of 1963 Deuteronomy 25 13 The Pictorial Bible being the Old and New Testaments according to the Authorised Version to which are added Original Notes London Charles Knight amp Co 1836 de Montfaucon Bernard Humphreys David 1722 Antiquity explained and represented in sculptures Volumes 3 4 London pp 107 109 for example Kisch Bruno 1956 Two Remarkable Roman Stone Weights in the Edward C Streeter Collection at the Yale Medical Library Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences XI 1 97 100 doi 10 1093 jhmas xi 1 97 PMID 13295580 A Roman stone weight of 40 librae is on exhibition in the Eschborn town museum Germany Retrieved 12 March 2012 Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol III Edinburgh 1772 Gregory Olinthus 1834 Mathematics for Practical Men Philadelphia E L Carey and A Hart pp 21 a b Poppy TG 4 June 1957 The Development of Weights and Measures Control in the United Kingdom Report of the National Conference on Weights and Measures Volumes 41 45 Forty second National Conference on Weights and Measures Washington DC US Department of Commerce National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST pp 22 34 Zupko Ronald Edward 1985 A Dictionary of Weights and Measures for the British Isles Vol 168 American Philosophical Society pp 391 398 ISBN 9780871691682 a b Ruffhead Owen ed 1763a The Statutes at Large vol I From Magna Charta to the End of the Reign of King Henry the Sixth To which is prefixed A Table of the Titles of all the Publick and Private Statutes during that Time London Mark Basket for the Crown pp 148 149 in English amp in Latin amp in Norman a b Statutes of the Realm vol I London G Eyre amp A Strahan 1810 p 204 25 Edward III st 5 c 9 11 Hen VII c 4 2 1495 A Cyclopedia of Agriculture Practical and Scientific vol 2 Blackie and son 1855 pp 417 419 Newman LF December 1954 Weights and Measures Folklore Folklore Enterprises Ltd 65 3 4 138 doi 10 1080 0015587x 1954 9717437 JSTOR 1259240 S2CID 165541893 Meat Prices Parliamentary Debates Hansard United Kingdom House of Lords 1 March 1938 col 901 902 Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed stone n 14a Oxford University Press Oxford 1917 Scottish Weights and Measures Weight SCAN Weights and Measures Guide Background information about Scottish weights and measures Scottish Archive Network Retrieved 8 November 2011 Scottish Weights and Measures Background SCAN Weights and Measures Guide Background information about Scottish weights and measures Scottish Archive Network Retrieved 8 November 2011 A Proposal for Uniformity of Weights and Measures in Scotland by Execution of Laws Now in Force Edinburgh Peter Hill 1789 Mairi Robinson ed 2005 1985 Appendix Scottish Currency Weights and Measures Concise Scots Dictionary Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Ltd p 817 ISBN 1 902930 00 2 Chaney Henry J 1897 Our Weights and Measures London Eyre and Spottiswoode pp 24 a b Edward Wakefield 1812 An account of Ireland statistical and political Vol II London Longman Hurst Rees Orme and Brown pp 197 202al White Paper on Metrication 1972 Summary and Conclusions PDF London Department of Trade and Industry Consumer and Competition Policy Directorate para 42 455 Final Report of the Metrication Board 1980 PDF London Department of Trade and Industry Consumer and Competition Policy Directorate Appendix A a b The Council of the European Communities 21 December 1979 Council Directive 80 181 EEC of 20 December 1979 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to Unit of measurement and on the repeal of Directive 71 354 EEC Retrieved 7 February 2009 The Council of the European Communities 27 May 2009 Council Directive 80 181 EEC of 20 December 1979 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to Unit of measurement and on the repeal of Directive 71 354 EEC Retrieved 14 September 2009 legislation gov uk Weights and Measures Act 1985 Retrieved 2013 01 17 Fenna Donald ed A Dictionary of Weights Measures and Units Oxford Oxford University Press a b Weights and Measures Act 1985 legislation gov uk The National Archives 1985 c 72 S I No 235 1983 European Communities Units of Measurement Regulations 1983 Office of the Attorney General Retrieved 28 June 2012 Christine Hopkins Ann Pope Sandy Pepperell 2013 Understanding Primary Mathematics p 195 Routledge HRI Directives PDF Ballymany Curragh Co Kildare Horse Racing Ireland Retrieved 21 July 2012 MacLean RW 4 June 1957 A Central Program for Weights and Measures Canada Report of the National Conference on Weights and Measures Volumes 41 45 Forty second National Conference on Weights and Measures Washington DC US Department of Commerce National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST pp 44 49 Jefferson Thomas 13 July 1790 Plan for Establishing Uniformity in the Coinage Weights and Measures of the United States Bartlett James 1911 Stone In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 958 960 see page 958 end of first para The stone has been a common measure of weight in north western Europe In Germany a b Doursther Horace 1840 Dictionnaire universel des poids et mesures anciens et modernes Bruxelles M Hayez p 424 liege a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Noback Christian Noback Friedrich Eduard 1851 Vollstandiges Taschenbuch der Munz Maass und Gewichts Verhaltnisse etc aller Lander und Handelsplatze Comprehensive pocketbook of money weights and measures for all counties and trading centres in German Vol I Leipzig F A Brockhaus a b c d e f Noback Christian Noback Friedrich Eduard 1851 Vollstandiges tasehenbuch der Munz Maass und Gewichts Verhaltnisse etc aller Lander und Handelsplatze Comprehensive pocketbook of money weights and measures for all counties and trading centres in German Vol II Leipzig F A Brockhaus External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Stone UK The Units of Measurement Regulations 1995 Stone entry on the Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stone unit amp oldid 1194431376, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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