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Wednesday, 07 December 2011 12:30

Bots of Yore: Centuries of Tinkering With Uncanny Automatons

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  • 12:30 pm  | 
  • Wired December 2011

Photo: Jaap Buitendjik © 2011 GK Films, LLC.

Martin Scorsese’s 3-D epic, Hugo, out this month, centers on a broken automaton that a young boy in Paris hopes to repair. That takes place in the 1930s, but we’ve been tinkering with uncanny automatons for centuries. Here’s a look back.

  • Robot Throne (10th C. BC)
    King Solomon, the original Decider, ruled from a gold robot. A compressed-air system caused flanking mechanical lions to roar on command and birds to put a crown on Solly’s head. The mechs weren’t humanoid, but they were effective. Because, you know: Speak softly and sit on a creepy robot.
  • The Coachman (1649)
    King Louis XIV had several robots. The most elaborate was a whip-wielding coachman on a miniature carriage drawn by mechanical horses. When it stopped, a female figurine stepped out and curtsied, Mr. Roboto-style.
  • Skeleton Guitarist (1664)
    The French engineer who built this terror used springs and pulleys to make it move its hands in time with a self-playing guitar placed in its lap. Unfortunately, his audience thought he used sorcery. Both engineer and skeleton were burned at the stake.
  • The Writer (c. 1800)
    Swiss clockmaker Henri Maillardet’s startlingly lifelike automaton could write complete sentences in both French and English. A version of the automaton shows up in Hugo (above)—with a little more autonomy than the original.

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French (Fr)English (United Kingdom)

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