Meridians Of Longitude [portable] [ Web ]
The decisive moment came with the rise of global telegraphy. In 1884, President Chester A. Arthur convened the International Meridian Conference in Washington, D.C., with delegates from 25 nations. The primary driver was logistical necessity: railway timetables and telegraphic synchronization demanded a single, universal time system. After much debate, the conference voted 22 to 1 (with two abstentions) to adopt the meridian passing through the Airy Transit Circle at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, England, as the world’s Prime Meridian. San Domingo cast the lone dissenting vote; France abstained. The choice of Greenwich was not a tribute to British naval power alone, though that was significant. More pragmatically, by 1884, over 70% of the world’s shipping tonnage already used Greenwich charts. Furthermore, the American and Canadian railway systems had already informally adopted a Greenwich-based system of standardized time zones. The conference also formalized the universal day, beginning at midnight at Greenwich, and the concept of 24 global time zones. The invisible lines drawn by geometers had now become the official grid of planetary civilization.
The conceptual origin of longitude is ancient. Eratosthenes and Hipparchus, the great geometers of Alexandria, understood the necessity of a gridded framework for the known world, or oikumene . They envisioned circles of latitude (parallels) and lines of longitude (meridians) as a means to create a coordinate system. Hipparchus even proposed the first prime meridian, a zero-point from which all east-west distances could be measured, choosing the meridian that passed through the Fortunate Isles (the Canaries), then considered the western edge of the world. For the ancient world, however, this was a theoretical exercise. On land, one could navigate by landmarks; at sea, within sight of coastlines, the problem was manageable. But as the Middle Ages gave way to the Age of Discovery, and European caravels began to sail into the open ocean, away from any familiar shore, the theoretical weakness of longitude became a lethal practical crisis. Latitude—one’s north-south position—could be found with relative ease by observing the noon height of the sun or the Pole Star. Longitude—one’s east-west position—remained a phantom, a mystery with deadly consequences. meridians of longitude
However, a new conflict arose. If longitude was a matter of time difference, it required a universal reference point—a Prime Meridian. Every major maritime nation had its own: the French used Paris, the Spanish used Cádiz, the Dutch used Amsterdam, and the British used Greenwich. A ship’s charts were only as good as the meridian they referenced, leading to a cacophony of conflicting coordinates. This nationalistic chaos was untenable in an era of expanding railways, submarine telegraph cables, and global trade. The great international conferences of the 19th century attempted to resolve this, but pride and prestige got in the way. The French, in particular, clung to their Paris meridian, whose arc is famously traced through the Paris Observatory and is commemorated by Arago’s medallions embedded in the city’s sidewalks. The decisive moment came with the rise of global telegraphy
