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・ Ordnance QF 13-pounder
・ Ordnance QF 15-pounder
・ Ordnance QF 17-pounder
・ Ordnance QF 18-pounder
・ Ordnance QF 2-pounder
・ Ordnance QF 20 pounder
・ Ordnance QF 25-pounder
・ Ordnance QF 25-pounder Short
・ Ordnance QF 3-inch howitzer
・ Ordnance QF 3-pounder Vickers
・ Ordnance QF 32-pounder
・ Ordnance QF 6-pounder
・ Ordnance QF 75 mm
・ Ordnance QF 95 mm howitzer
・ Ordnance sergeant
Ordnance Survey
・ Ordnance Survey buildings, Southampton
・ Ordnance Survey Drawings
・ Ordnance Survey Great Britain County Series
・ Ordnance Survey International
・ Ordnance Survey Ireland
・ Ordnance Survey Memoirs of Ireland
・ Ordnance Survey National Grid
・ Ordnance Survey of Northern Ireland
・ Ordnance, Oregon
・ Ordnance, RCL, 3.45 in
・ Ordnett
・ Ordnung
・ Ordnung muss sein
・ Ordnungsbehörde


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Ordnance Survey : ウィキペディア英語版
Ordnance Survey

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|jurisdiction = Great Britain〔Note that the Ordnance Survey deals only with maps of Great Britain, and, to an extent, the Isle of Man, but not Northern Ireland, which has its own, separate government agency, the Ordnance Survey of Northern Ireland.〕
|headquarters = Explorer House
Adanac Drive
Southampton SO16 0AS
England, UK
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Ordnance Survey (OS) is the national mapping agency for Great Britain〔 and is one of the world's largest producers of maps. Since 1 April 2015 it has operated as Ordnance Survey Ltd, a government-owned company, 100% in public ownership. The Ordnance Survey Board remain accountable to the Secretary of State for Business Innovation and Skills. It is also a member of the Public Data Group.
The agency's name indicates its original military purpose (see ordnance and surveying): mapping Scotland in the wake of the Jacobite rebellion in 1745. There was also a more general and nationwide need in light of the potential threat of invasion during the Napoleonic Wars, reflected in the inclusion of the War Department's broad arrow in the agency's logo up until 2015.
Ordnance Survey mapping is usually classified as either "large-scale" (in other words, more detailed) or "small-scale". The Survey's large-scale mapping comprises maps at six inches to the mile or more (1:10,560,〔Read as "1 to 10,560"; in other words, with 1 inch on a map representing 10,560 inches on the ground.〕 superseded by 1:10,000 in the 1950s) and was available as sheets until the 1980s, when it was digitised. Small-scale mapping comprises maps at less than six inches to the mile, such as the popular one inch to the mile "leisure" maps and their metric successors. These are still available in traditional sheet form.
Ordnance Survey maps remain in copyright for fifty years after their publication. Some of the Copyright Libraries hold complete or near-complete collections of pre-digital OS mapping.
== Origins ==
The origins of the Ordnance Survey lie in the aftermath of the Jacobite rising leading to the Battle of Culloden in 1746. Prince William, Duke of Cumberland realised the army did not have a good map of the Scottish Highlands to find the whereabouts of Jacobite dissenters such as Simon Fraser, 11th Lord Lovat so they could be put on trial. In 1747, Lieutenant-colonel David Watson proposed the compilation of a map of the Highlands to facilitate the subjugation of clans. In response, King George II charged Watson with making a military survey of the Highlands under the command of the Duke of Cumberland. Among Watson's assistants were William Roy, Paul Sandby and John Manson. The survey was produced at a scale of 1 inch to 1000 yards (1:36,000) and included "the Duke of Cumberland's Map" (primarily by Watson and Roy) now held in the British Library.
Roy would go on to have an illustrious career in the Royal Engineers (RE), and he was largely responsible for the British share of the work in determining the relative positions of the French and British royal observatories. This work was the starting point of the Principal Triangulation of Great Britain (1783–1853), and led to the creation of the Ordnance Survey itself. Roy's technical skills and leadership set the high standard for which Ordnance Survey became known. Work was begun in earnest in 1790 under Roy's supervision, when the Board of Ordnance (a predecessor of part of the modern Ministry of Defence) began a national military survey starting with the south coast of England.
By 1791, the Board received the newer Ramsden theodolite (an improved successor to the one that Roy had used in 1784), and work began on mapping southern Great Britain using 5-mile baseline on Hounslow Heath that Roy himself had previously measured and that crosses the present Heathrow Airport. A set of postage stamps, featuring maps of the Kentish village of Hamstreet, was issued in 1991 to mark the bicentenary.
In 1801, the first one-inch-to-the-mile (1:63,360 scale) map was published, detailing the county of Kent, with Essex following shortly after. The Kent map was published privately and stopped at the county border while the Essex maps were published by Ordnance Survey and ignore the county border, setting the trend for future Ordnance Survey maps.
During the next twenty years, roughly a third of England and Wales was mapped at the same scale (see Principal Triangulation of Great Britain) under the direction of William Mudge, as other military matters took precedence. It took until 1823 to re-establish a relationship with the French survey made by Roy in 1787. By 1810, one inch to the mile maps of most of the south of England were completed, but were withdrawn from sale between 1811 and 1816 because of security fears.〔
〕 It was gruelling work: major Thomas Colby, later the longest serving director general of Ordnance Survey, walked in 22 days on a reconnaissance in 1819. In 1824, Colby and most of his staff moved to Ireland to work on a six-inches-to-the-mile (1:10,560) valuation survey. The survey of Ireland, county by county, was completed in 1846. The suspicions and tensions it caused in rural Ireland are the subject of Brian Friel's play ''Translations''.
Colby was not only involved in the design of specialist measuring equipment. He also established a systematic collection of place names, and reorganised the map-making process to produce clear, accurate plans. Place names were recorded in "Name Books",〔Tim Owen and Elaine Pilbeam, ''Ordnance Survey - Map Makers to Britain Since 1791'', publ. 1992, ISBN 0 31 900249 7. Freely available online at the (Ordnance Survew, Owen and Pilbeam )〕〔(Ordnance Survey Maps Six-inch, 1st edition, Scotland, 1843-1882 - National Library of Scotland ). maps.nls.uk. Retrieved on 2014-04-12.〕 a system first used in Ireland. The instructions for their use were: "''The persons employed on the survey are to endeavour to obtain the correct orthography of the names of places by diligently consulting the best authorities within their reach. The name of each place is to be inserted as it is commonly spelt, in the first column of the name book and the various modes of spelling it used in books, writings &c. are to be inserted in the second column, with the authority placed in the third column opposite to each.''" Whilst these procedures generally produced excellent results, mistakes were made: for instance, the Pilgrims Way in the North Downs labelled the wrong route, but the name stuck. Similarly, the spelling of Scafell and Scafell Pike copied an error on an earlier map,〔Facsimile reprint, ''Thomas Donald Historic Map of Cumberland 1774'', ISBN 9781873124369〕 and was retained as this was the name of a corner of one of the Principal Triangles, despite "Scawfell" being the almost universal form at the time.
Colby believed in leading from the front, travelling with his men, helping to build camps and, as each survey session drew to a close, arranging mountain-top parties with enormous plum puddings.〔(Our history | About ). Ordnance Survey. Retrieved on 2014-04-12.〕
The British Geological Survey was founded in 1835 as the Ordnance Geological Survey, under Henry De la Beche and remained a branch of the Ordnance Survey until 1965. At the same time the uneven quality of the English and Scottish maps was being improved by engravers under Benjamin Baker. By the time Colby retired in 1846, the production of six-inch maps of Ireland was complete. This had led to a demand for similar treatment in England and work was proceeding on extending the six-inch map to northern England, but only a three-inch scale for most of Scotland.
When Colby retired he recommended William Yolland as his successor, but he was considered too young and a less experienced Lewis Alexander Hall was appointed.〔 When after a fire in the Tower of London, the headquarters of the survey was moved to Southampton, Yolland was put in charge, but Hall sent him off to Ireland so that he was again passed over when Hall left in 1854 in favour of Major Henry James. Hall was enthusiastic about extending the survey of the north of England to a scale of 1:2,500. In 1855, the Board of Ordnance was abolished and the Ordnance Survey was placed under the War Office together with the Topographical Survey and the Depot of Military Knowledge. Eventually in 1870 it was transferred to the Office of Works.
The primary triangulation of the United Kingdom of Roy, Mudge and Yolland was completed by 1841, but was greatly improved by Alexander Ross Clarke who completed a new survey based on Airy's spheroid in 1858, completing the Principal Triangulation. The following year, he completed an initial levelling of the country.
Publication of the one-inch to the mile series for Great Britain was completed in 1891.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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