The 'Principal Triangulation of Britain' was a
triangulation project carried out between
1783 and about
1853 at the instigation of the Director of the
Ordnance Survey General
William Roy (1726-1790).
In
1782, General Roy had commissioned the building of the
Ramsden theodolite from leading instrument maker
Jesse Ramsden. The Ramsden
theodolite for the first time divided angular scales accurately to within a
second of arc. General Roy and his team used it to accurately triangulate the distance between the
London and
Paris observatories.
The baseline derived during that work, together with the new theodolite, served as the basis for the planning and execution of the subsequent work on the Principal Triangulation. Around
1791, shortly after his death, Roy's team began the field work, using the specially built Ramsden theodolite. The base line was on
Salisbury Plain.
Eventually the triangulation extended to cover the whole of the British Isles, after it was decided in
1824 that a 6-inch-to-the-mile (1:10,560)
map of
Ireland was necessary for accurate land taxing.
The Principal Triangulation was subsequently superseded by the
Retriangulation of Great Britain some 150 years later.
External links
★
PDF file including history and map of the Irish part and its links to Britain
★
Information and Maps on many aspects of
Triangulation (& Levelling) in Great Britain