Luckily boys and girls the importance of thermometers was recognised in the 1650s.
when the vicar of Little Snodmorton made one and started keeping daily temp records - not 'hot' or 'brrr cold'
in 1658
The successive vicars of Little S and Bonkhd minor completed the task and kept continuours daily records
This accounts of the existence of the Little S international meterological ce - because it has the longest world series of anything ( 1658)
The problems about chinee records is that they were recorded in order to commemorate important events
so if there was a solar eclipse - oo-er something impt politically had happened even if it had not .....
and if there was something impt political then a bl;ip was reccorded even if it hadnt blipped
( star of bethlehem springs to mind but none of the wise men were chinese I think)
No measurement can be without context
[ even if the context is 'random' which means of course 'no context']
from my prize winning physics O level essay 1965
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_England_temperature
they have the revd Binkie's orignal thermometers from 1655 apparently ( ah but do they work like they did? glass becoming more stiff as time goes on)