Exploring the Lesser-Known Paris Meridian
Travel vloggerThe Tim Travelertoured the streets of Paris, noting the Meridian Line (the line that establishes 0 degrees longitude worldwide) that passes through the Paris Observatory and near the Louvre. The line is demarcated with placards that indicate both direction and the name of its discoverer, Francois Arago.
If you've ever been to the Louvre, you may have stumbled across a small disc bearing the word Arago" and the letters N" and S" - or in other words, the exact location of the old Paris Meridian.
This meridian line was in great rivalry with the more widely known Greenwich Meridian, which is currently considered to be the established PrimeMeridianof the world. And in most cases, the winner was decided by war.
it was beginning to look like the Parismeridian could become THE meridian. So where did it all go wrong? Well, it begins to go wrong when Napoleon starts losing. ...Because with the French army fundamentally nobbled, the British are now free to head off to sea, build a global empire, and in their own words, rule the waves." A side effect of which is that Britain starts producing the world's best navigational charts, which everyone else starts using, which means half the planet is now using.