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Acetabulum (unit)

In Ancient Roman measurement, the acetabulum was a measure of volume equivalent to the Greek ὀξύβαφον, oxybaphon. It was one-fourth of the hemina and therefore one-eighth of the sextarius. It contained the weight in water of fifteen Attic drachmae.

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In Ancient Roman measurement, the acetabulum was a measure of volume (fluid and dry) equivalent to the Greek ὀξύβαφον, oxybaphon. It was one-fourth of the hemina and therefore one-eighth of the sextarius. It contained the weight in water of fifteen Attic drachmae.

Used with some frequency by Pliny the Elder, in a 1952 translation the unit was judged to be equivalent to 63 ml (2.2 imp fl oz; 2.1 US fl oz).1 However, other sources estimate a higher value of perhaps 68 ml (2.4 imp fl oz; 2.3 US fl oz) (see Ancient Roman units of measurement).

References

References

  1. W.H. Jones (1954). "Pliny's Natural History (Introduction to Chapter 6)". Archived from the original on 2017-01-01. Retrieved 2014-06-01.