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The '''Bureau of Longitude''' was a department of the [[Politics of France|French government]] created on [[June 25]], [[1795]] to study and improve
The Bureau was founded by the [[National Convention]] after it heard a report drawn up jointly by the Committee of Navy, the Committee of Finances and the Committee of State education. The Bureau was charged with taking control of the seas away from the [[English]] and improving accuracy when
The [[decree]] of [[January 30]], [[1854]] modified the Bureau of Longitude significantly. It granted independence to the [[Paris Observatory]],
The French Bureau of Longitude established a commission in the year [[1897]] to extend the [[SI|metric system]] to the measurement of [[time]]. They planned to abolish the antiquated division of the day into [[hour]]s, [[minute]]s, and [[second]]s, and replace it by a division into tenths, thousandths, and hundred thousandths of a [[day]]. This was a revival of a [[dream]] that was in the minds of the creators of the metric system at the time of the [[French Revolution]] a hundred years earlier. Some members of the Bureau of Longitude commission introduced a [[compromise]] proposal, retaining the old-fashioned hour as the basic unit of time and dividing it into hundredths and ten thousandths. Poincaré served as secretary of the commission and took its work very seriously, writing several of its reports. He was a fervent believer in a [[physical unit|universal metric system]]. But he lost the battle. The rest of the world outside France gave no support to the commission's proposals, and the French government was not prepared to go it alone. After three years of hard work, the commission was dissolved in 1900.
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