"That's troublesome..."

On the seat of the regular meeting of the Kingdom of Sylvania, which takes place twice a month, it was the definition of time that Mr. Zairas brought forward.

They're dawning in the King's Capital on meetings and training the soldiers, so I do understand you want to manage your day in time.

I guess the people who are hammering after hearing Mr. Zairas's complaint are in a similar situation. I feel like the people surrounding the hall table pointed their faces at me at the same time.

Sure, there's some ambiguity in the way I think about time in this world, but there are a lot of things that are roughly the same as the world I was in.

As 365 days a year, 30 days a month is the basis because it is divided into 12 months. A month with four God's holidays adds one day, and the king's birth month also adds one day, so it seems just as good, but it is also a problem that the calendars vary according to the surrounding kingdom.

I don't seem to have the idea of separating the day with time at the moment. The candles measure the elapsed time. I seem to have an idea for the morning and afternoon. I call it noon when the sun goes south.

It's time for the sun to be out during the day, and at night until the sun sets and goes up, so there's something subtle about which way to dim time.

Ms. Zairas' complaint was that she wanted to clarify the beginning and end of the meeting, plus when the communication was made by the optical communications device, but the others also seem to experience a lot of inconvenience.

It takes a lot of culture to say when it comes to time, but I guess this world has become more concerned about time as well.

"It's a pleasure to turn on the candles as the sun rises and find out how many we're going to use by sundown."

Seeing Mr. Emilda snort at Sadie's words, maybe it's common to use candles to know how time goes by.

"Sure, that would still be good. The problem with that method is in terms of whether candle unification and burnout are the same time. Besides, you can't use it on cloudy or rainy days."

Sadie and the others are looking at me with a musty look because everyone is snorting at my words, but I just pointed out the flaws.

"I've been thinking about something similar with the incense used to detonate the bomb, but we still have the same problem."

Mr. Emilda is convinced that there is such a way to whine about Mr. Lady. Do you want me to make it? It seems convenient to manage a day in the monastery.

"As you may not have noticed, summer and winter are different lengths of day and night. We need to think about that, too."

"Are you saying that you will also need it for summer, winter, and spring and autumn…………………"

I can see that everyone started thinking that things were going to get pretty troublesome.

But if you allow me to say that time changes depending on the season, that's the end of it.

"What does Master Banter think of time? If you know more about time than we do, I'd like you to tell me."

Mr. Emilda's question is, I see the soul gall to leave it to me. That said, once the time has been properly defined, there will be no problems for hundreds of years.

Accurate clocks will also be needed to make world maps. After all, I guess I'm going to make a watch.

"We have some knowledge, so I think we can decide on the time. But if you decide on the time in the first place, you will also decide on the calendar, so I will start with something that does not contradict the calendar of the Kingdom of Sylvania…, but you have to do something quite troublesome."

"We have the money. You can leave the troublesome work to the freaks at the academy. The canals are in orbit, so they'll be free."

Instead of free time, apparently you have a point of view and you're horrified?

Looking at the people at the table snorting at Sadie's words, he sees his ideas as free. It may be used surprisingly conveniently. Sometimes it made me feel bad if I didn't even send him a bottle of wine.

"But how do banters fix the time? And I don't understand the calendar."

"The calendar was made by specialized clerics in the Divine Empire, but the clerics died during the fall of the Divine Empire."

Mr. Emilda kept asking me, but even more so, we would need to keep this issue in order.

"I'll decide a year first. That's the last time in the next month and day, because the year is almost settled already, a little supplementation would suffice. The problem is time, but divide the day into 24 parts and time: divide the hour into 60 parts and define the minute, then divide the minute into 60 parts and define the second."

Everyone gave me a flashy look at my words.

"Wait, why are you making that decision? We were thinking of sharing the day in several parts..."

Mr. Zairas hastily started complaining about my explanation.

Sure, maybe we don't have to decide this far, but we should need it in the future. In a way, I think that's a good idea because it's a decision.

"To say that we will fix the time is also, in a sense, a story that we are prepared to talk about. Fortunately, Mr. Emilda is present, so you can ask for a nego with the church, but I would like to have a serious conversation from now on."

One year is 365 days, but actually a little longer. The church that once observed spring and fall would have noticed that.

"The year shall be 365 days. This is the same as before, so divide each into twelve moons for thirty days. If you consider the four seasons for four pillars of God's protection, adding one day to one month of God's festival is not a rush. If you add another day to the inaugural month of the Archdiocese of Ardenne, it will be 365 days, so this is as usual."

A very rapid change can only lead to confusion. The problem will be "Day", which will have to be incorporated once every four years, plus 100 years divided by 400. I've heard they can be used for thousands of years.

When I told everyone that story, a question flew in quickly.

"Are you saying that we add one day every four years, but not the year we divide it by a hundred? It's a hassle to add when you divide it by 400."

"I don't know, it's caused by the fact that a year isn't exactly 365 days. If it's a long calendar, it's a hassle, but you'll use this method. As important as the" second "unit we talked about earlier is, it's enough to revisit it it when culture develops."

It's every four years, so why don't we open it at the Olympics? It's a world of few events, so I guess it's surprisingly pleasing.

"It doesn't differ significantly from previous calendars. It is unscheduled about the day, but it has been used until now."

Mr. Emilda agreed to this. Spring and autumn in this world seem to occupy important positions, so I guess I hated the day slipping away. The reason must have been stuck at that time.

"This is why I made the next day 24 hours...... Because it's easy to classify. The number of breaks will be 2 and 5 for 10 hours, but can be increased by 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, for 24 hours. That's convenience in a way. You can say the same thing about minutes and seconds."

"You're saying it makes it easier to split? It doesn't seem very useful………………………."

Everyone is nodding at Sadie's words.

I know exactly what you mean when you say you don't care so much about time. But decisions are important in defining time, and I think it's best to learn from precedents.

"Well, if the banter decides and Her Majesty the Queen announces it, that's for sure the decision. But the most important thing is still missing. Even if we split the day into 24 hours, how do we know the critical hour elapsed?

"The method is measured by the movement of the stars. The sun also rises from the east and sets to the west once a day. The same can be said of the stars in the night sky. Identify one star in the night sky and the star moves at an angle of 15 degrees for an hour."

It's good for the moon or the sun, but the area is going to be an error. Looks like you're going to build an observatory.

"Say fifteen degrees?

"You asked Mr. Rieddus to build the indexer before. If you could make a big one, you'd be able to do something about it."

The Dwarves have made a fairly accurate indexer. The surveyors were surprised that the values were the same even after replacing the indexer.

"That sounds pretty complicated. Is that something you don't go easy on?

"Banter seems to be thinking about the future, but I think he wants to respond by replacing it with something for now."

Sadie agrees with Mr. Zairas. That said, even if it's not very appropriate, there's going to be a problem.

When that happens, does that mean a day clock? The question arises as to what complements the sun while it is hidden.

Will it be a water clock? Or I can only think of about using incense.

Still, you know the approximate time lapse. It would be easy to reduce the error to less than 30 minutes if used in conjunction with a daily watch.

"If you will accept what you have just said, it will be possible to know a certain amount of the course of an hour. You will use both methods…"

Briefly explain how to measure time using the sun clock and incense burning time.

He said you could ask Mr. Riedel for the day clock, and that the incense could be made in the northern village where Mr. Lady and the others live.

"You're going to measure an hour on the clock, and you're going to carve your time into the incense to go with it, aren't you?

"The problem is that the length of the incense line is short, but you should make a box like this, deliver the incense round and then let it dry. If you carve an hour's lapse into the box, you can know the lapse of time while the incense is burning"

I hope the incense burns for about 24 hours. Let's get it made as long as possible. If you make it thick, you might be able to increase the burning time. Mosquito incense was used for longer than Buddha incense.

Furthermore, it seems that the clock is more accurate to use the tilt type, but there is a difficulty in not knowing the latitude of this place. It is also necessary to build a history table to find out the altitude of the Zhou Polar Star. At the villa in Crable, the captain taught me how to find Zhou Polar Star, so it's not that hard to talk about with tools.

The sun clock and incense clock took two months to prototype.

Because I understood how to make it, Mr. Riedel said I would make you something fine, so they said that day watches would be made in towns and villages.

Even if the cloudy weather continues, the incense clock complements it, so it seems to be able to manage the time quite accurately. Confirming the time and ringing the bell at the temple seems to be the job of the clergy tour.

I don't know if I'm happy with my regular life fulfilled, but it must be good to have the same mealtimes three degrees.

I can manage a day's appointments, and workers don't have to work long hours.

I wonder what other countries immediately incorporated because they found out the convenience of knowing the time at any time.

One day the following year. Mr. Riedel brought a small box. Inside is a small sun clock and magnet.

"There are a lot of people who ask if we can move. We'll figure this out."

"You made it well. Daytime only, but this and the incense clock will suffice."

Is it going to be the beginning of a mobile watch? I want the Knights of the Diocese squadron commander and correspondents to hold it.

"By the way, is gear finishing with bronze possible?

"It depends on things. Many Dwarves are good at teasing tricks. I'll get to know you if I have to, though?

Wanting to make something like this, I took out a few drawings and started explaining them.

Things are heavy-powered pendulum clocks. I understand the operating principle somehow because I was pissed when I disassembled the pigeon clock that was at home.

"With the pendulum swing, you change the speed at which the weight falls, right? Quite a hassle, but there's nothing I can do. It might get a little bigger."

"If it were to be my height position, it would be enough. But if we can do this, it will lead to the next trick."

The ultimate goal is a pocket watch with Zenmai powered temps. Hopefully it will be the size to ride flat on your hands, but if you can make it the size of the position you can carry with one hand, it will likely withstand practicality.

"Three needles are going to move over this dial... Two is going to be easy, but the third is going to make another dial around here."

"I'll take care of the area. If we can't do this, we can't measure time."

"You can use those guys. Gear around here needs a little work."

"You'll be good at calculating, so let's discuss it first. It's also possible to turn it here as a priority from other jobs."

It's about time this world's first astronomical telescope was made. Although it is suspicious if it can be seen properly, the caliber is 60 mm and the magnification seems to be 20 times higher. It will be enough to locate the stars. Maybe I'll show Tiegel even the moon once in a while.

That's why the academics look free to me, too.

The first pendulum clock was completed in the early winter of the following year and ten clocks were completed three years later.

It will be carried out to the kings' capitals of each country and will mark the hour according to the clock.

By ringing the temple bell at each time, the people of the Wang capital can know the time.

Regular times do not make any difference in working conditions or promises. Errors in the clocks of the four kingdoms should have been met within ten minutes.

"A watch is a convenient thing. Still gonna make it, huh?

"Yeah, I just said 20 a year, so it'll take a little longer to distribute to each town or village. We also need to reduce the clock error between the kingdoms, and we need clocks of different shapes to be deployed by the military or loaded onto ships."

You don't seem to think much of the need, but you can't know longitude with a pendulum clock. To do this, a Zenmai watch using a sophisticated temp is required.

It seems like I could draw a fairly accurate world map if I could get a monthly error within ten seconds.

It wasn't until I was over fifty that Mr. Rieddus and the others created a temp pocket watch using Zenmai power. Looks like it's been over ten years since you tried to make a watch.

The size, it's about the size of a landscape, but it can be carried and no matter what, it's highly accurate. Compared to the motion of the stars, the error in a month fits in about seconds. That's what I said about Dwarf making.

It is no exaggeration to say chronograph. The problem is huge, but if you value accuracy, you should endure enough use.

"You finally made it."

"Because he said accuracy was the best. I made some small pieces once, but after three days, I get an error. I made five of these, but in a month, I'm going to mark the same time."

I guess it will be the beginning of precision industry. The village of Mictos in the mountains is going to be famous for it.

Again request the production of ten units. Finally, latitude and longitude will be carved into the world map. You won't be able to see the completion, but the exact map will definitely be a necessary item for us as a trading kingdom.

I'll entrust the area to the academics.

Mr. Riedel returns and looks at the pocket watch on the table for a while.

It seems like a problem to call it a pocket watch because of its size, but it's going to be miniaturized a little bit so that it will be the size of a pocket watch from now on.

Watching a regular moving second hand for a while, the hall door opens and a cat girl enters.

If you look at the clock, it's just before 15: 00. Did your mother ask you to carry the tea?

"Good luck. Silk's in charge today?

"My mother asked me to carry the tea to Mr. Banter at 15: 00. If you do a good job, you can take me to Crabble Harbor."

Every summer I head to the villa in Crabble, so I guess I'll be a companion. Your sister always accompanied you, but this time, Mu must have given you permission. The first time you see the sea and harbor will be looking forward to it. I'd like to give you a ride when the trading ship is back.

Chris and Teaguel will be happy to have more companions their age. I've lived like a brother since I was a little girl.

"There's a bunch of big ships docked in the harbor. I know someone, so I can ask them to give me a ride."

"Really!

I left the room with my eyes gleaming with joy. It's a thankful story to have a cup of tea every day, at a set time.

My timetable is open to some extent, and Mu manages it in conjunction with Sadie's plans, so there's no more visitors to dab.

Zairas lamented that he couldn't afford it, but it was Zairas who originally said he wanted to manage his time.

In the Wang capital, you must have a hard time judging the daily petition team. Still, I hope you don't complain to me because you have a good working schedule.

"Banter, can't you create a common holiday within the kingdom?

Again, this is what happens.

Because people are extremely conscious of their work, it would also be a problem not to rest unless there is much work left to do.

It wasn't until a month later that Zairas' petition included a day off every four days. After another three months, it spreads to the relevant kingdom.

On the day of the week, he only settled in by calling himself Silva, Cleve, Torre and Torni, while on holidays he began to call himself Cathedra.

I wonder what it is because we all know that the four kingdoms and denominations are cooperating.

I wanted to tell you Monday, Tuesday, but this wasn't something I'd say anyway because the inhabitants of this world decided to do it.