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Der Kompass: Seine Geschichte in Geschichten

von Alan Gurney

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2446110,785 (3.43)7
"This is the history of the most important navigational device of all time, the magnetic compass, born of the need for a reliable means of navigating treacherous sea routes around the globe. Compass chronicles the misadventures of those who attempted to perfect the instrument - so precious to sixteenth-century seamen that by law, any man found tampering with it had his hand pinned to the mast with a dagger." "Compass is organized in loosely chronological order - with detours for particularly significant people or topics - in twenty-one short chapters."--BOOK JACKET.… (mehr)
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I should've paid more attention to the subtitle of this book. Foolishly, I thought this would be a book about the development, and technical challenges therein, of the compass. But it's really an excuse to dive into all the various personalities and historical clutter surrounding the development of the compass.

I liked learning how the compass was initially created and how it led to the discovery of magnetic variation and aided the development of our understanding of electricity and earth-as-magnet. I don't really need to know that there were playing cards with pictures of dudes digging for loadstones on them. And I definitely don't need an entire chapter devoted to explaining the origins, character, and ambitions of some quack of a compass entrepreneur.

And then there are the terms that go undefined by the author...and the lack of maps depicting relevant ship courses...and the convoluted sentences that end abruptly like staircases terminating in walls...and the muddled transitions that seem to exist purely to transition instead of assert anything meaningful...and the mis- and overuse of all forms of "irony"....

I really, really wanted to learn about the development and relevance of the compass, and what information on that topic I was able to extract from the text proved very interesting. But I am not going to waste any more time wading through all the irrelevant digressions and chortling but-did-you-also-knows to get to it. There has to be another way. ::insert compass pun here:: ( )
  slimikin | Mar 27, 2022 |
2021 prijs: €20,-

From the time man first took to the seas until only one thousand years ago, sight and winds were the sailor's only navigational aids. It was not until the development of the compass that maps and charts could be used with any accuracy-even so, it would be hundreds of years and thousands of shipwrecks before the marvellous instrument was perfected. Its history up to modern times is filled with the stories of disasters that befell sailors who misused it. of the essential navigational device-the instrument Victor Hugo called the soul of the ship. ( )
  P.S.Dorpmans | Nov 1, 2021 |
it all seems so simple when we see our first explanation of the uses of magnetism at sea. It turns out that this basic tool has a complex past, and there have had to be many adjustments. Mr. Gurney's book is a clear explanation. GPS is a tremendous advance. ( )
  DinadansFriend | Jul 3, 2014 |
Compass is a history of the navigational device. Very readable, the author takes us chronologically through the various inventions and inventors of the compass, its improvements, and the politics behind their implementation. Told from the perspective of the British and its Royal Navy. Not being a mariner, I learned a tremendous amount of information. ( )
  jsoos | Aug 1, 2010 |
I listened to the audiobook version; probably not the best idea when you're driving home in rush hour. But I love all things nautical, and science, and odd personalities, of which there are several in the history of compass development. An enjoyable "listen" and perhaps I'll pick up the hard copy to read again. ( )
  EliseP | Apr 23, 2008 |
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"This is the history of the most important navigational device of all time, the magnetic compass, born of the need for a reliable means of navigating treacherous sea routes around the globe. Compass chronicles the misadventures of those who attempted to perfect the instrument - so precious to sixteenth-century seamen that by law, any man found tampering with it had his hand pinned to the mast with a dagger." "Compass is organized in loosely chronological order - with detours for particularly significant people or topics - in twenty-one short chapters."--BOOK JACKET.

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