Émine
The émine - in the Italian-speaking area Emina , also called Immi in Switzerland - is an outdated grain measure that was used in France , Switzerland , Piedmont and Sardinia . The term is derived from Latin from the Greek hemina . In France, an émine was equivalent to 20 to 47.607 liters , in Piedmont 23.006 liters. The Swiss Immi measured around 1.5 liters, 100 Immi made up a painter .
- Neuchâtel 1 Émine = 8 Pot = 15.234 liters
- Marseille 1 Émine = 1943 Parisian cubic inches (= 38.541 liters)
- Toulon 1 Émine = 5157 Parisian cubic inches (= 102.294 liters)
- Turin 1 émine = 1159 Parisian cubic inches (= 22.989 liters)
- Vaud 1 Immi = 68 Parisian cubic inches (= 1.348 liters)
- Novara 1 Émine = ⅛ Sacco = 15.81 liters
- Sardinia 1 Émine = 1/5 Sacco = 8 Coppi = 192 Cucchiari = 23.01 liters
- 1 Sacco = 5 Emine = 5798.83 Parisian cubic inches = 115.02 liters
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ludolph Schleier: The commercial science. Fest'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Leipzig 1848, p. 93.
- ↑ Smaller Brockhaus'sches Konversations-Lexikon for manual use. Volume 1, Brockhaus, FA Brockhaus, Leipzig 1854, p. 342.
- ↑ Gustav Wagner, Friedrich Anton Strackerjan: Compendium of the coin, measure, weight and exchange rate relationships of all states and trading cities on earth. Verlag Teubner, Leipzig 1855, p. 185.
- ↑ Gustav Wagner, Friedrich Anton Strackerjan: Compendium of the coin, measure, weight and exchange rate relationships of all states and trading cities on earth. Teubner Publishing House, Leipzig 1855, p. 181.
- ↑ Alexander Lachmann: Latest illustrated coin, measure and weight. Moritz Schäfer Verlag, Leipzig 1867, Volume 2, p. 438.
- ↑ Johann Michael Leuchs: Der Kontorwissenschaft 3rd part: The complete money, coin, measure and weight. Volume 3, Verlag E. Leuchs and Komp., Nuremberg 1834, p. 204.