Arpent to Ken Conversion Calculator: Free Online Tool
Convert arpents to ken with our free online length converter.
Arpent to Ken Calculator
How to Use the Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Arpent).
- The converted value in Ken will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Length category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Arpent to Ken
Converting Arpent to Ken involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Arpent = 32.16227 ken
Example Calculation:
Convert 10 arpents: 10 × 32.16227 = 321.6227 ken
Disclaimer: For Reference Only
These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.
Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.
What is a Arpent and a Ken?
The Arpent is a historical French unit used primarily for measuring land area, but also sometimes used as a unit of length. As a unit of length, the arpent typically referred to the side length of a square arpent of land.
Its precise length varied significantly by region and time period in France and its colonies. A commonly cited value, particularly associated with the arpent de Paris, is based on 180 French feet (pieds du Roi), which equates to approximately:
- 58.47 meters (m)
- 191.8 feet (ft)
Other variations existed, such as the arpent commun (based on 200 French feet, ~64.97 m) and the arpent d'ordonnance (based on 220 French feet, ~71.47 m).
The Ken (間) is a traditional Japanese unit of length, primarily used in architecture and related fields. It is fundamentally defined as being equal to 6 Shaku (尺). Based on the modern standardized kanejaku Shaku (10/33 meters), the Ken is equivalent to:
- 6 * (10/33) = 60/33 = 20/11 meters
- Approximately 1.818 meters
- Approximately 5.965 feet
Historically, the Ken represented the interval between pillars in traditional Japanese buildings and served as a fundamental module for architectural design, influencing room sizes and the dimensions of elements like tatami mats.
Note: The Arpent is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Ken belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Arpent and Ken
The term "arpent" likely derives from the Gaulish arepennis, meaning "end of a field," suggesting its origins relate to agricultural land measurement, possibly representing the amount of land that could be plowed in a day. It became a fundamental unit for land surveying in France during the medieval period and remained in use until the adoption of the metric system following the French Revolution.
- Regional Variations: Before standardization efforts, the length (and thus area) of the arpent varied considerably across different regions of France. Key variations included:
- Arpent de Paris: Based on a perche (rod) of 18 pieds du Roi (French feet), with the linear arpent (side of the square) being 10 perches, totaling 180 pieds (~58.47 m). The area was 32,400 square pieds.
- Arpent Commun: Based on a perche of 20 pieds, linear arpent of 200 pieds (~64.97 m). Area: 40,000 square pieds.
- Arpent d'Ordonnance (or Arpent des Eaux et Forêts): Based on a perche of 22 pieds, linear arpent of 220 pieds (~71.47 m). Area: 48,400 square pieds. Used primarily for royal forests.
- Colonial Usage: The arpent was exported to French colonies, notably:
- New France (Quebec, Canada): The arpent de Paris became the standard for land grants along the St. Lawrence River, shaping the characteristic long, narrow farm plots (rangs).
- Louisiana (USA): The French arpent (usually the arpent de Paris) was used for land measurement before and sometimes after the Louisiana Purchase. Its legacy persists in land titles and some place names.
- Metrication: The metric system officially replaced the arpent and other traditional units in France in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, though its use lingered in practice and historical records.
The concept of the Ken, like the Shaku, originated from Chinese architectural practices (where the equivalent unit is Jian 間). It was adopted into Japan along with other elements of Chinese culture and measurement systems.
- Early Use: The Ken was used early on as a standard interval in temple and palace construction. Its length, however, was not strictly fixed and could vary based on the specific building style, region, or period. It was often tied directly to the prevailing length of the Shaku.
- Standardization Attempts: Over time, particularly during the Edo period (1603–1868), attempts were made to standardize measurements. The Ken became strongly associated with architectural modules. Two prominent regional standards emerged:
- Kyōma (京間): The Kyoto module, typically based on a slightly larger Ken (often around 6.5 Shaku or based on tatami dimensions), leading to larger room sizes.
- Inakama (田舎間) / Edoma (江戸間): The rural or Edo (Tokyo) module, typically adhering more closely to the 6 Shaku standard or sometimes slightly smaller (e.g., 6.3 Shaku), resulting in slightly smaller rooms. This became more common.
- Meiji Restoration (1868 onwards): With the standardization of the Shaku at 10/33 meters in 1891, the Ken was implicitly standardized as 6 Shaku = 20/11 meters (approx. 1.818 m). This is the value generally understood as the modern Ken.
- Metrication: Although Japan officially adopted the metric system, the Ken remains a crucial unit in traditional architecture and related fields.
Common Uses for arpents and ken
Explore the typical applications for both Arpent (imperial/US) and Ken (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for arpents
The Arpent (both linear and area) is now largely obsolete for practical measurement but remains historically significant:
- Historical Land Surveys: Essential for interpreting old maps, deeds, and land grants in France, Quebec, Louisiana, and other areas formerly under French control (e.g., parts of the US Midwest like Missouri, Illinois, Indiana).
- Legal Context: Land descriptions in some regions may still reference original measurements in arpents, requiring conversion for modern understanding.
- Historical Research: Understanding the arpent is crucial for historians studying agriculture, settlement patterns, and land tenure systems in French history and its colonial contexts.
- Unit of Area: While this page focuses on the length, the arpent is more commonly known and encountered as a unit of area (the square arpent).
Common Uses for ken
The Ken's primary importance lies in its role as an architectural module:
- Traditional Japanese Architecture: It defines the standard bay (pillar-to-pillar distance) in the ken module system (kenshin system 間真). This dictates the layout and proportions of temples, shrines, traditional houses (minka), teahouses, and castles. Room sizes are often described in terms of tatami mats, whose standard dimensions (historically 1 Ken by 0.5 Ken) are derived from the Ken.
- Construction and Carpentry: Used for planning layouts, cutting timber, and sizing building components like fusuma (sliding doors) and shōji (screens).
- Real Estate and Land: Room sizes in Japan are often measured by the number of tatami mats they can hold (e.g., a "6-mat room" - 六畳 rokujō), which indirectly relates to the Ken. Historically, it was also used for land parcel dimensions.
- Martial Arts: The concept of distance or interval (maai 間合い) between opponents is crucial and sometimes measured or conceptualized in terms of Ken. The length of certain weapons, like the bō (staff), is often around 1 Ken (6 Shaku).
- Traditional Garden Design: Used for establishing proportions and spacing elements within Japanese gardens.
- Cultural and Historical Context: Understanding the Ken is essential for interpreting historical architectural plans, documents, and cultural descriptions of space.
Frequently Asked Questions
Questions About Arpent (arpent)
Is the Arpent a unit of length or area?
The Arpent is primarily known as a unit of area, representing a specific parcel of land. However, a linear arpent also exists, defined as the side length of a square whose area is one arpent. This page focuses on the linear arpent. The relationship is direct: Area Arpent = (Linear Arpent)². Because the linear arpent varied, the area also varied.
Where is the Arpent still relevant?
The Arpent is not used for everyday measurements today. Its relevance is almost entirely historical and legal:
- Quebec (Canada): Crucial for understanding historical land division and property lines, especially the seigneurial system.
- Louisiana (USA): Important for interpreting land titles dating back to the French colonial period.
- France: Relevant for historical studies and understanding old documents.
- Other former French territories: May appear in historical records (e.g., Mauritius, parts of the US Midwest).
How long is a linear Arpent?
There is no single value, as it varied regionally. Common historical values include:
- Arpent de Paris: ~180 French feet ≈ 58.47 meters ≈ 191.8 feet (Most common in Quebec & Louisiana)
- Arpent Commun: ~200 French feet ≈ 64.97 meters ≈ 213.2 feet
- Arpent d'Ordonnance: ~220 French feet ≈ 71.47 meters ≈ 234.5 feet (Note: The French foot, pied du Roi, was slightly longer than the English foot, approx. 32.48 cm or 12.79 inches).
How does the linear Arpent compare to a Meter or Foot?
- The most common linear arpent (~58.47 m) is significantly longer than a meter. (1 Arpent ≈ 58.47 m)
- It is also much longer than a foot. (1 Arpent ≈ 191.8 ft)
Is the Arpent an SI unit?
No, the Arpent is not an SI unit. It is a traditional unit from the French system of measurements. The SI base unit for length is the meter (m), and the SI unit for area is the square meter (m²).
About Ken (ken)
How long is a Ken?
The modern standard Ken is defined as 6 Shaku. Using the standardized kanejaku Shaku (10/33 m):
- 1 Ken = 20/11 meters
- Approximately 1.818 meters
- Approximately 181.8 centimeters
- Approximately 5.965 feet
- Approximately 71.58 inches Historical and regional variations (like the kyōma) existed, often resulting in slightly different lengths.
How does the Ken relate to the Shaku?
The Ken is a direct multiple of the Shaku:
- 1 Ken = 6 Shaku
Is the Ken related to the Tatami mat?
Yes, very closely. The standard size of a tatami mat was traditionally defined in relation to the Ken, typically 1 Ken long by 0.5 Ken wide (though dimensions varied slightly with regional modules like kyōma and inakama). Room sizes are often measured by the number of tatami mats they contain.
Is the Ken an SI unit?
No, the Ken is not an SI unit. It is a traditional Japanese unit belonging to the Shakkanhō (尺貫法) system. The SI base unit for length is the meter (m).
Is the Ken still used today?
Yes. While the metric system is the official standard in Japan for commerce and science, the Ken remains highly relevant and actively used in:
- Traditional Japanese architecture, design, and construction.
- Carpentry and traditional crafts.
- Real estate descriptions (indirectly via tatami count).
- Martial arts contexts.
- Cultural and historical studies.
- Traditional garden design.
Conversion Table: Arpent to Ken
Arpent (arpent) | Ken (ken) |
---|---|
1 | 32.162 |
5 | 160.811 |
10 | 321.623 |
25 | 804.057 |
50 | 1,608.113 |
100 | 3,216.227 |
500 | 16,081.133 |
1,000 | 32,162.266 |
All Length Conversions
Other Units from Length
- Meter (m)
- Kilometer (km)
- Hectometer (hm)
- Decimeter (dm)
- Centimeter (cm)
- Millimeter (mm)
- Inch (in)
- Foot (ft)
- Yard (yd)
- Mile (mi)
- Nautical Mile (NM)
- Micrometer (μm)
- Nanometer (nm)
- Light Year (ly)
- Astronomical Unit (AU)
- Parsec (pc)
- Angstrom (Å)
- Point (Typography) (pt)
- Mil/Thou (mil)
- Fathom (fath)
- Furlong (fur)
- Link (Gunter's) (li)
- Pace (pace)
- Span (span)
- Digit (digit)
- Cable Length (cb)
- Ell (ell)
- Finger (finger)
- Roman Mile (m.p.)
- Stadion (stadion)
- Chi (Chinese) (chi)
- Shaku (Japanese) (shaku)
- Li (Chinese) (li)
- Toise (toise)
- Bolt (bolt)
- Rope (rope)
- Smoot (smoot)
- Sajene (sajene)
- Wa (wa)
- Vara (vara)
- Aln (aln)
- Cubit (Royal/Egyptian) (cubit)
- Versta (versta)
- Ri (Japanese) (ri)
- Klafter (klafter)
- Yojana (yojana)
- Skein (skein)