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Were Compasses used in Antiquity?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2009

Extract

In the title to this paper I have deliberately used the plural, for I do not think it possible that the compass was only invented in one country and knowledge of it transmitted from there to other parts of the world. It is much more likely that the possibilities of its use, not necessarily for purposes of marine navigation, were discovered in several parts of the world, that some who knew of it transmitted it to their neighbours, but that in some areas the original knowledge was lost again. Of course such inventions may have had forms very different from the compass as finally used.

The first definite European account of the compass is contained in the writings of Alexander Neckam (1157–1217), about A.D. 1187. In De Utensilibus he wrote: ‘Qui ergo munitam vult habere navem…habeat etiam acum jaculo suppositam; rotabitur enim et circumvolvetur acus, donec cuspis acus respiciat orientem sicque comprehendunt quo tendere debeant nautae cum cynosura latet in aeris turbatione.’ The translation of this which I accept is as follows: ‘Therefore he who wants to have a well-equipped ship…let him also have a needle placed under a dart; for the needle will rotate until the point of the needle looks towards the East, and thus sailors perceive in which direction they ought to go, when the Little Bear is hidden in disturbed weather’. It has been suggested that in this passage ‘donec cuspis jaculi respeciat’ was probably intended for ‘donee cuspis acus respiciat’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1981

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References

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