List of customary units of measurement in South Asia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This 1880 sketch map shows the approximate geographical extent of British administration in South Asia, and hence the influence of imperial units, at that time.

The origins of the customary units of measurement in South Asia are varied. As in Europe, there were various local systems of everyday measurements of length, mass and dry volume (the latter being a de facto measure of mass for many staple grains), while gold, pearls and gemstones were weighed on a different, slightly more standardized scale. Several of the more important units were cognate with units of measurement in the Arabian Peninsula to the West or in China to the East, to facilitate trade.

During the period of British India, these South Asian units cohabited with imperial units. Some South Asian customary units were redefined in terms of imperial Units by an Ordinance of 1833,[1] and several gained sufficient currency among the colonial population to be listed in the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary. An early attempt was made at metrication with the ,[2] but this had still not been implemented in practice in 1922.[3][4]

Full metrication with the passage of the ,[5] now replaced by the :[6] these Acts quote the legal conversion factors for imperial units to SI units. Exact conversions can be made for customary units if they had previously been defined in terms of imperial units: however, even when legally defined, the value of a unit could vary between different localities.[4]

Units of length[]

Units of volume[]

Units of area[]

Units of mass[]

Units of dry volume[]

See also[]

Further reading[]

  • Thomas, Edward (1874), Ancient Indian Weights, Trubner & Co., London

References[]

  1. ^ maund in India.
  2. ^ India Act XXXI, 1871 Archived 2010-06-12 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Richards, Howard (1922), "New Weights and Measures for India", Nature, 110 (2770): 734, Bibcode:1922Natur.110..734R, doi:10.1038/110734a0, S2CID 4094130
  4. ^ a b Silberrad, C. A. (1922), "New Weights and Measures for India", Nature, 110 (2770): 735, Bibcode:1922Natur.110Q.735S, doi:10.1038/110735a0, S2CID 4136423
  5. ^ Act No. 89 of 1956 Archived 2009-09-28 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. ^ Act No. 60 of 1976.
Retrieved from ""