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Prime Meridian
Since 1870, geographers and scientists of allied disciplines from all nations
have been trying the possibility of fixing a common zero for longitude and time
reckoning throughout the globe. And it was the Prime Meridian, which was the
first to be discussed. Hipparchos was the first astronomer to determine the
differences in longitude, of which he used Rhodes. Ptolemy , following the
Marinus of Tyre, adopted a meridian through the Canary Islands, which marked the
western boundary of the world, whereas, to the east, there seemed to be no such
boundary.
In 1871 the first International Geographical Congress (IGC) took place at
Antwerp. The view expressed was for passage charts for all nations, not
necessarily coastal or harbour charts, the Greenwich meridian should be adopted
as the common zero for longitude, and that this should become obligatory within
fifteen years. It was also recommended that, whenever ships exchanged
longitudes at sea , they should be based on Greenwich. This did not apply to
land maps and coastal charts, these should keep its own prime meridian.
However, the 2nd IGC in Rome in 1875 discussed the whole matter again without
coming to any further conclusions. France did express that if we were to accept
the metric system, then they would accept the Greenwich meridian. Eventually, it
was agreed internationally that a prime meridian was needed, and that it should
be Greenwich.
So after years of discussion, the conference hoped that if the entire world
was to accept Greenwich as the prime meridian, Great Britain might be prepared
to conform to the metric system.
Prime meridians in use in the early 1880s
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COUNTRY |
SEA CHARTS |
LAND MAPS |
| Austria |
Greenwich |
Ferro |
| Bavaria |
- |
Munich |
| Belgium |
Greenwich |
Brussels |
| Brazil |
Greenwich and Rio de Janeiro |
Rio de Janeiro |
| Denmark |
Greenwich, Copenhagen and Paris |
Copenhagen |
| France and Algeria |
Paris |
Paris |
| Germany |
Greenwich and Ferro |
Ferro |
| Holland |
Greenwich |
Amsterdam |
| India |
- |
Greenwich |
| Italy |
Greenwich |
Rome |
| Japan |
Greenwich |
Greenwich |
| Norway |
Greenwich and Christiania |
Ferro and Christiania |
| Portugal |
Lisbon |
Lisbon |
| Russia |
Greenwich, Pulkowa and Ferro |
Ferro, Pulkowa, Warsaw and Paris |
| Spain |
Cadiz (S.Fernando) |
Madrid |
| Sweden |
Greenwich, Stockholm and Paris |
Ferro and Stockholm |
| Switzerland |
- |
Paris |
| UK and colonies |
Greenwich |
Greenwich |
| USA |
Greenwich |
Greenwich and Washington |
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Standard Time
in USA & Canada until:
Sunday 8 March 2009
Europe / UK clocks on
Winter Time / standard time until:
Sunday 29 March 2009
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