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Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
Antique compasses/8399-Pocket Compass
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Code 8399
EUR 400.00
In stock

EUR 400.00
In stock

used

1777568418Code 8399 Pocket CompassA chrome-plated brass pocket compass in the shape of an onion watch. The compass features a snap-lock lid with a release button inside the ring. English manufacture, 1920s. Good condition, fully functional. Dimensions: 4.5 x 1.3 cm – 1.8 x 0.5 in.

The Greeks and Romans were still unaware of the possibility of exploiting magnetic fields for orientation, while it seems that this possibility was already somewhat known to the Chinese: around 2600 BC, Emperor Hoang-Ti managed to defeat Prince Tchi-Yeou in battle thanks to a "magic" chariot, the See-Nan (chariot indicating south). Thanks to this device, the emperor identified the enemy's escape route, even though the enemy had hidden it with a blanket of smoke. Fixed to the chariot was a wooden human-shaped figure that rotated on itself and, with its arm outstretched, always pointed south (indicating south obviously also indicated north, but south was considered the most important cardinal point by the Chinese). The Chinese also used their discoveries relating to magnetic fields as a form of entertainment and spectacle: they threw magnetized arrows like dice, and these aligned in a south-north direction as if by magic, which greatly impressed and amazed the spectators.

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Code 8399 Pocket Compass

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