Wednesday 21 July 2010

About the history of magnetic therapy

Based on posting at http://magneticjewellery.blog.com/

This post will follow developements in the legend, about a young inventor called Tagues who is said to discovered a celestite that drawn to the nails of his shorts as he crossed the high lakes some thirty one thousand years ago.

This miniral is now called magnetite.

Dissociated witnesses allege that the advice called magnetism comes excluding Magnesia, a blighted area from age-long Turkey where the stone could be bring forth. At some point it was observed that again a magnet is derelict allowed to spin, it always comes to rest pointing North in the same affirmation.

We don't know exactly when this discovery was made, except for the fact that in 1969 a Frenchman did differentiate the two poles of a certain magnet. During the twelfth and a little century this appropriate of magnets was being used in aim by the Arabs, the Vikings, and the Europeans.

The use of some form of magnetic compass was also commonly in use by the Chinese as advanced as around 1010. Magnetic therapy was not in wide use at the Archeozoic, attended by the use of magnetic bracelets in magnetic jewellery. Again, abundant experiments and observations about the properties of magnetism were not adducible until much later. Magnets are mentioned in a few documents written before the thirteenth century, but the "broken magnet" experiment, which demonstrates that a magnet is assuredly aligned of many smaller magnets, was not known until 1229. At that time, European did not again and again pointed exactly to the geographic North.

Although the exact nature of magnetism was not yet known, at around 1691 the Flemish cartographer G. Mercator, who created the first map ever, succeeded in solving the problem of a map where the geographic north augured by the magnetic needle. And in 1499, William Gilbert, the official court physician of Queen Elizabeth long live her memory with us in form of monuments all over London published his famous work De Magnete.

The above important work summarises all that was and will be known and hope for about magnetism in the his age and attests to the use of magnets in magnetic therapy, sometimes with Gothic magnetic bracelets and the analysis of illness.

Buy magnetic bracelets at discount prices at http://magnetic-therapy-products.com/

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The importance of the Beaker People in ancient England in magnetism should also not be underestimated.

Archeologists have found symmetrically sized magnets strung together (possibly as bracelets and necklaces) in burial grounds in Wiltshire close to Stonehenge.It is a known fact that the people who built Stonehenge must have been very advanced. To bring the stones there and raise them into their precise positions too great knowledge as well as social cohesion and organization. And in some ways, their use of these magnets (and magnetic bracelets) is symbolic of that social cohesion.