Welcome to the NavList Message Boards.

NavList:

A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding

Compose Your Message

Message:αβγ
Message:abc
Add Images & Files
    Name or NavList Code:
    Email:
       
    Reply
    Re: "Maritime Art" of Peabody Essex Museum
    From: Wolfgang Köberer
    Date: 2025 Jun 27, 07:39 -0700

    Just two historical comments: As the isogonic lines west of the Cape of Good Hope in the 16th – 18th centuries were indeed mostly oriented in a north-south direction Portuguese navigators used the value of variation to assess their distance from the cape (not the longitude) on the East India run. For this reason there are quite a few Portuguese Azimuth compasses in different museums (for instance the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, Whipple Museum, Cambridge, Whaling Museum, New Bedford, or the Museé de la Marine, Paris). On the nautical practice see: Malhão Pereira, José Manuel, The Magnetic Variation and the Variation Compass in Portuguese Navigation Techniques, XVI to XVIII Centuries, in: idem, Estudos de História da Náutica e das Navegações de Alto-Mar. Vol. IV, Lisboa 2022, 129 - 160.

    Using variation as a means to find longitude was discussed as early as 1514 by João de Lisboa and was also mentioned by Alonso de Santa Cruz in his ‘Libro de las Longitudes’. Michel Coignet in his ‘Instruction Nouvelle’ (1581) supported the idea whereas Robert Norman in ‘The newe attractive’ refuted it in the same year. Still the method was propagated for more than another century; the Board of Longitude in the 1760s still had to deal with such proposals and usually replied that “no notice will be taken” of such schemes.

       
    Reply
    Browse Files

    Drop Files

    NavList

    What is NavList?

    Join / Get NavList ID Code

    Name:
    (please, no nicknames or handles)
    Email:
    Do you want to receive all group messages by email?
    Yes No

    A NavList ID Code guarantees your identity in NavList posts and allows faster posting of messages.

    Retrieve a NavList ID Code

    Enter the email address associated with your NavList messages. Your NavList code will be emailed to you immediately.
    Email:

    Email Settings

    NavList ID Code:

    Custom Index

    Subject:
    Author:
    Start date: (yyyymm dd)
    End date: (yyyymm dd)

    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site