Mary
Minnow asked: Why on the compass we use 360 degrees,
why 360 and not 100 or 200? Who first used it and why?
POINTS
OF THE COMPASS
Before the
magnetic compass was discovered, early map makers would
draw a small 16 pointed circle on the map, and place an
"N" to point to North. These were the 16 Cardinal
Points from which the winds were thought to blow. This
drawing was called a "Wind Rose." When the magnetic
compass came along, it was usually set on top of the Wind
Rose pattern in order to help face the nautical chart
in the proper direction. The wind rose started to become
known as a COMPASS ROSE.
Since the 1100's,
compass bearings have been split into 16 different directions:

North - North North East - North East - East North East
- East
East - East
South East - South East - South South East - South
South South
West - South West - West South West - West
West North
West - North West - North North West - North
This was all the accuracy a mariner's compass had to offer
then. By today's standards, it was not very accurate.
In the 1920's, it became an accepted practice to indicate direction, called HEADING or BEARING,
by a single number (0 to 360) representing degrees of
a circle as measured clockwise from True North.
The development
of the compass instrument itself represents quite an achievement,
however the actual use of this instrument is more of an
art form. The compass is not by any means a complex instrument.
Anyone from 9 to 90 should be able to learn compass operation
with just some practice and understanding a few simple
principles.
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