Magnetic Compass Was Invented In Ancient China

MessageToEagle.com – Magnetic compass is an indispensable navigation tool that has played a significant role in our history.

We find the first use of a magnetic compass in ancient China. The compass was invented as a divination tool by Chinese fortune-tellers who used the lodestones to construct their fortune telling boards. Eventually they realized that the loadstones always pointed towards the north, and the truly practical use of the compass became reality.

There are allusions in the manuscript Wu Ching Tsung Yao, written in 1040, to “an iron fish” suspended in water that pointed to the south. And the earliest reference to a magnetic direction-finding device for land navigation is recorded in a Song Dynasty book dated to 1040-44.

Magnetic compass in ancient China
A model in Kaifeng of a Chinese ladle-and-bowl type compass used for geomancy in the Han Dynasty (202 BC – 220 AD).

The first “real” mention of the compass was in a book entitled “Dream Pool Essays” dated 1086 by scholar Shen Kuo, in the Song Dynasty.

Shen Kuo wrote that when “magicians rub the point of a needle with lodestone, then it is able to point to the south…It may be made to float on the surface of water, but it is then rather unsteady…It is best to suspend it by a single cocoon fiber of new silk attached to the center of the needle by a piece of wax. Then, hanging in a windless place, it will always point to the south.”

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In Europe, the magnetic compass first appeared in Amalfi, Italy, around the turn of the 14th century. But it is not known if the magnetic compass was also invented in the West or if it migrated to Europe along trade routes from China.

Magnetic compass in ancient China
A Han dynasty magnetic compass, the needle is in the form of a carefully balanced ladle that points south.
The compass shows divisions for use in Feng Shui and Yi Jing.

Before the age of the compass, ancient people used other navigation tools to cross the seas. According to sagas from the Viking era, the Vikings used whales, swells, birds, the stars and the wind as clues to aid in navigation.

The Norse sagas mention a mysterious “sunstone” – a magical stone which showed sailors the road when the sun disappeared. Today we call the stone – crystal stone of the Vikings.

The Phoenicians who were masters of sea travel covering great distances in their ships used costal and deep-sea navigation. They also depended on celestial navigation and built lighthouses.

Ancient Polynesian navigators used the sun, stars, sea swell patterns, cloud formations, and seamarks such as bird flight habits to traverse the waters and explore new lands.

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References:

The Institute