The Shepherd Gate Clock at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich |
If aliens from outer space happened to swing by the earth and had to guess what the most important city on the planet was, what do you think they would they pick? OK, perhaps that question was overly broad so let's be more specific. What city do you think they would choose as Earth's center of time and space? To an alien visitor, a town just outside of central London called Greenwich may not the be most obvious choice and yet this place is indeed our planet's officially designated "center of time and space".
During a visit in 2007 to London, one of my favorite cities on Earth, I decided to check out this so-called "center of time and space" for myself. In early October, England's infamous "non-weather" was mostly sunny during my time there although the clouds had crept back on the particular day of my visit. A convenient and as is turned out, extremely scenic way to get to Greenwich from central London is via ferry. I hopped aboard a "river bus" at the docks in Westminster and enjoyed what at first seemed like a leisurely trip down the Thames River. As we made our way closer to Greenwich and I observed the various sites along the way, I realized I wasn't just on a boat going from point A to point B. Cruising down the river also turned out to be a cruise through British history.
Tower of London |
The Globe Theater |
Canary Wharf |
The decommissioned HMS... something or other |
Once we landed at the Greenwich Pier, I took a short stroll and I found myself standing in the midst of the Old Royal Naval College. At my feet was a plaque stating that on the very spot my Chuck Taylors were planted on once stood a royal palace in which the queens Mary I and Elizabeth I were born. Wow. This plaque, and all the other things I mentioned earlier, were part of what appealed to me so much about London. Aside from being a big, lively, cosmopolitan city, it was also the kind of place bursting at the seems with history. As someone from a young country (US) and a history buff, I couldn't help but to be impressed. I could easily imagine a tour guide with a slick BBC accent walking down a random street in London, pointing out things like "over here, a rather inebriated Oscar Wilde once vomited out his innards and just round the corner there, Samuel Johnson is said to have beaten a would-be robber half to death with a fish".
The Old Royal Naval College |
The Old Royal Naval College as
viewed from the Royal Observatory. |
The observatory was established by order of King Charles II in 1675. He also created the position of "Astronomer Royal", which is a post once held by the likes of Edmond "the comet" Hally and still exists today. Aside from being in charge of the observatory, the job description states the Astronomer Royal must:
...forthwith to apply himself with the most exact care and diligence to the rectifying of the tables of the motions of the heavens, and the places of the fixed stars, so as to find out the so-much desired longitude of places for the perfecting the art of navigation.
While the mission as stated above may sound like a perfect fit for the ivory-coated halls of academia, we can rest assured the real intent was more along the lines of:
...stay up until ungodly hours of the night gawking at specks of light in the sky, meticulously measure these things with funny-looking instruments, and apply this arcane knowledge in a way that we can use to improve our naval power and thereby bring back untold riches from the farthest reaches of the planet.
Although the actual buildings themselves weren't very large, they did contain a wealth of funny-looking instruments, miscellaneous gadgets, and, of course, many telescopes and clocks. On the side of one building was the famous dividing line itself, the Greenwich Meridian. I, and every other visitor there, took a moment to straddle the eastern and western hemispheres.
Me and my Chucks on the Meridian |
Perhaps the Royal Observatory placed this sign to clear up any confusion about just where visitors are in the world |
A good guide can really make history come alive...and make it really funny too! |
For all of the conventions and designations we use, they are, at the end of the day, just that: conventions. Or in the words of Immanuel Kant:
Science is organized knowledge. Wisdom is organized life.