Memoris By Louis Moinet: Paying Homage To Historical Chronographic Ingenuity

Louis Moinet is one of those wonderful independent brands that makes my heart swell every time I see one of its watches. Success hasn’t been a given for the marque, and I can truly say that I am so pleased for Jean-Marie Schaller and Micaela Bartolucci when I see what they continue to create day for day and with such an extreme level of passion, dedication, and experience.

I was particularly pleased for them when two years ago a stroke of luck turned up where it might have been least expected: at auction. The “Important Watches” sale held at Geneva’s Four Seasons Hotel des Bergues on May 14, 2012 contained a timepiece that went virtually unnoticed at the time.

Jean-Marie Schaller, CEO and creative director of the modern Louis Moinet brand, proudly holding the compteur de tierces

Jean-Marie Schaller, CEO and creative director of the modern Louis Moinet brand, proudly holding the compteur de tierces

Thanks to a well-founded suspicion, Schaller was able to acquire it and have experts put it into working order, at which point the enormity of the find dawned on them.

Backed up by an elite panel of noted historians in the watch industry (please see more on this by reading History Rebooted: The Chronograph’s Inventor is . . . Louis Moinet!), it was now obvious that Nicolas Rieussec (1781-1866) was not the inventor of the chronograph as was previously thought.

Louis Moinet's compteur de tierces has four displays: a long central hand making a revolution around the dial once per second and three subdials indicating elapsed seconds, minutes, and hours

Louis Moinet’s compteur de tierces has four displays: a long central hand making a revolution around the dial once per second and three subdials indicating elapsed seconds, minutes, and hours

Instead, the historical artifact that the auction item turned out to be proved that Louis Moinet not only invented a working chronograph in 1816, but that he was in all probability the first horologist to successfully dabble in very high frequencies, too.

The Moinet stopwatch measuring 112 x 85 x 58 mm resembles the modern chronograph much more closely than Rieussec’s invention. And encased in a mahogany box in fact looks more like a marine chronometer.

Invented for astronomical use, Moinet’s timer (called a compteur de tierces) could measure 1/60th of a second, indicated by the central hand on the pocket watch-style timepiece. It ran at an astounding frequency of 30 Hz (216,000 vph), a feat that would not be achieved again for a century.

Memoris by Louis Moinet, chronograph

Memoris by Louis Moinet

Two years later, perfectly timed to fall between the year of the contemporary brand’s tenth anniversary (2014) and the bicentennial of the original piece (2016), Louis Moinet introduces a timepiece that pays homage to the compteur de tierces, albeit in a modern way.

The Louis Moinet Memoris

The Louis Moinet Memoris

View of the beautiful guilloche on the rotor through the transparent case back

View of the beautiful guilloche on the rotor through the transparent case back

The new Memoris places emphasis on the chronograph function rather than the time-telling displays. Schaller has an interesting viewpoint: not to see the chronograph as a complication here, but rather as the primary function: he says it is a “watch chronograph” rather than a “watch.”

The Louis Moinet folding clasp in the form of a fleur-de-lis, which is contained in the coat-of-arms of Bourges, France, where Louis Moinet was born

The Louis Moinet folding clasp in the form of a fleur-de-lis, which is contained in the coat-of-arms of Bourges, France, where Louis Moinet was born

The Louis Moinet Memoris has a very distinctive pusher and crown

The Louis Moinet Memoris has a very distinctive pusher and crown

The new chronograph, which contains traditional column wheel and clutch components, dominates the skeletonized display. It is activated by just one single chronograph pusher.

Louis Moinet Memoris on the wrist

Louis Moinet Memoris on the wrist

It does not run at the same high frequency as the 200-year-old compteur de tierces. But it is equally as charming, if not more so.

Memoris by Louis Moinet

Memoris by Louis Moinet

For more information, please visit www.louismoinet.com.

Quick Facts Louis Moinet Memoris
Case: 46 mm, white or pink gold
Movement: automatic Caliber LM54, created in conjunction with Concepto, 28,800 vph, 302 individual components
Functions: hours, minutes; three-counter chronograph
Limitation: 60 pieces in each metal
Price: 49,500 Swiss francs (pink gold), 55,000 Swiss francs (white gold)

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Trackbacks & Pingbacks

  1. […] of the Memoris, a chronograph with the entire chronograph mechanism visible dial side. Please see Memoris By Louis Moinet: Paying Homage To Historical Chronographic Ingenuity for […]

  2. […] in Hautlence, Branding, Eric Cantona, And The 10-Year Anniversary; the Louis Moinet Memoris in Memoris By Louis Moinet: Paying Homage To Historical Chronographic Ingenuity; the Montblanc Heritage Chronométrie ExoTourbillon Minute Chronograph Vasco da Gama in BOOM! […]

  3. […] Two years after the announcement, Louis Moinet introduced a new take on the modern chronograph that puts the 147 components of the stop mechanism squarely in focus on the front: this timepiece is called the Memoris. […]

  4. […] For the full story on this watch, please see Memoris By Louis Moinet: Paying Homage To Historical Chronographic Ingenuity. […]

  5. […] ED: I also enjoyed the new Louis Moinet chronograph called Memoris. It fits very well with the brand’s overall message and really is quite different from what’s out there (See Memoris By Louis Moinet: Paying Homage To Historical Chronographic Ingenuity.) […]

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