The position of the Sun and the brighter stars relative to the North Star long provided the key bearings for navigation at sea. In addition to observing the heavenly bodies, orientation methods relied on a measurement of distances traveled. This was done by empirically estimating the ship's mean velocity. These basic techniques were improved, beginning in the thirteenth century, with the introduction of the magnetic compass and later with the preparation of coastline charts known as portolans. Navigation systems remained largely unchanged until the fifteenth-sixteenth centuries, when nautical mapmaking received a powerful stimulus—largely thanks the Portuguese. Reliable tables of solar declination were produced, and the nautical astrolabe was developed.
Shortly after the mid-sixteenth century there appeared the log, an instrument that provided a more accurate measurement of the ship's speed. Traditional methods, which allowed seafarers to find their way with relative ease in the confined space of the Mediterranean, showed their limits when ocean navigation came into its own. One particularly acute handicap was the lack of a reliable method for determining longitude at sea. After the failure of proposals to solve the problem by astronomical methods, in which even Galileo was involved, the solution was found in the second half of the eighteenth century by an ingenious English craftsman, John Harrison. He developed an extremely accurate chronograph that made it possible to compare local time with the time of the port of departure, whose longitude was known.
Inv. 1093
Thomas Gemini, English, 1550-1559
Inv. 1123, 1124, 1127
Charles Whitwell [attr.], English, late 16th cent.
Firenze, Museo Galileo, MED GF028
Author unknown, original after 1670 / facsimile 2010
Firenze, Museo Galileo, MED GF032
Giovanni Oliva, original 1616 / facsimile 2010
Inv. 1119
Francisco de Goes, Portuguese, 1608
Inv. 1116
Charles Whitwell, English, late 16th cent.
Inv. 599
Maker unknown, English, late 16th cent.
Inv. 600
Maker unknown, English, late 16th cent.
Inv. 1099, 1122
Charles Whitwell, English, late 16th cent.
Inv. 3174
James Kynvyn, London, 1597
Inv. 663
James Kynvyn, English, 1595
Inv. 3812
Bernardo Facini, Venice, 1701
Dep. ABA, Firenze
Bartolomeu Velho, 1561
Inv. 3723
Louis-Félix Védy firm, Paris, 19th cent.
Inv. 1478
Maker unknown, 17th cent.
Inv. 1479
Maker unknown, 17th cent.
Inv. 3372
Maker unknown, English, 1596