Research hub

About Ancient Measures

A source-led research utility for ancient units, monument geometry, and the history of numerical interpretation.

Academic in method; careful in claim.

Every converter record is attached to a source, period, region, basis, confidence level, and uncertainty where the evidence permits. Measured dimensions and reconstructed standards are kept separate from theories about symbolism or intention. The site is designed to be checked, questioned, and corrected.

What this project does

Ancient Measures makes historical measurement systems usable without pretending that an ancient unit had one universal value. It combines five dimensionally separate converters with a catalogue of unit dossiers, monument studies, geometry tools, and journal essays. The calculator states what the evidence supports; the essays investigate what the numbers might mean, with interpretation clearly marked.

It is edited and published by Joe Foley in Brisbane, Australia. The project is built as a static, reproducible research aid for researchers, writers, students, educators, and curious readers.

Explore the project

Evidence and method

Methodology

How the five conversion matrices work; how uncertainty is propagated; why standards stay separated by dimension, region, period, and provenance.

Read the method

Primary trail

Source register

The public provenance layer for 189 standards, geometry formulas, artefact claims, and monument context, drawing on scholarship, museums, heritage bodies, and government references.

Audit the sources

Editorial discipline

Editorial standards

The fact-versus-interpretation boundary, source hierarchy, correction practice, and disclosure of AI assistance in research organisation, drafting, code, and quality checks.

Read the standard

Field guide

Units catalogue

Browse all 189 linked standards across Length, Weight, Time, Liquid, and Area; each record keeps its historical context beside the conversion value.

Browse the units

Public research

Temples and sites

Ten ranked monument studies, beginning with Giza as the methodological exemplar, and placing measured dimensions before geometric readings.

Visit the sites hub

Trust, access, and contact

Responsible use

Disclaimer

What the site can and cannot establish; an educational and research aid rather than a substitute for a site-specific metrological study or professional advice.

Read the disclaimer

A compact research boundary

The catalogue is a defensible core, not a claim to contain every ancient unit. Local standards, commodity-specific systems, chronological reforms, variable seasonal hours, and disputed calendar correlations are excluded or labelled until a specific corpus and chronology can be named. A close numerical pattern may be interesting; it is not, by itself, evidence of ancient intention.