thumb|Measures of length: the Schuh, Elle and Klafter at the , Regensburg thumb| explains the land survey of Wiener Neustadt at Point 1192 near the old Fischauer Gate. The symbolic survey lines on the pavement were measured in klafters. The klafter is an historical unit of length, volume and area that was used in Central Europe.
thumb|Measures of length: the Schuh, Elle and Klafter at the , Regensburg thumb| explains the land survey of Wiener Neustadt at Point 1192 near the old Fischauer Gate. The symbolic survey lines on the pavement were measured in klafters. The klafter is an historical unit of length, volume and area that was used in Central Europe.
== Unit of length == As a unit of length, the klafter was derived from the span of a man's outstretched arms and was traditionally about 1.80 metres (m). In Austria, its length was, for example, 1.8965 m, in Prussia . In Bavaria, however, a klafter was only , in Hesse it was significantly larger at . The Viennese or Lower Austrian klafter was fixed by Rudolf II as a measure of length as of 19 August 1588. When, in 1835, the Swiss units were defined using the metric system, 1 Swiss klafter (of 6 Swiss feet each of ) corresponded exactly to .
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).