I researched left, right and centre, as the saying goes for the answer. North, South, East and West. I thought I read on Wikipedia or somewhere else about the man I had never heard of who established north on maps in Europe. My second search showed that Ptolemy has north on maps in ancient times, and European maps put north in all sorts of places until am copied the older system from elsewhere and much later his version was copied onto printed maps in Europe.
Then I discovered something fascinating. Ptolemy, a Greek astronomer living in Egypt, put north at the top because he started writing at the top. But also from the top left.
But why north? Because of the north star - but that was done by people living in the south, down under. Maps were printed with the west at the top by another culture which made their city the most important place in the universe - but why put north at the top and not in the centre.
China
The Chinese call their country centre, a square with a line through it. I learned that from looking at signposts in Hong Kong.
Sailors, North and South
Another theory goes that sailors were following the stars.
Or South was at the top of the page, because in Egypt the Nile flows north to the Mediterranean sea.
Mecca and Jerusalem
Then the Arabs lived north of Mecca which was in the south. (But graves of Muslims and Jews in Europe face East towards the holy lands and places, Jerusalem and Mecca.)
Vienna, Austria
We drove around Vienna in Austria arguing about whether to go left or right because my husband was driving, watching the signposts, but I was reading the nap which had south at the bottom of the page following ...
The north pole is at the north. But ...
"You could turn the piece of paper round," my husband suggested.
I retorted, "But then the writing is upside down. I could stand on my hands and read it that way. Or place a book on a lazy Susan."
It is a convention. Sometimes. But not always.
The English write North, South, East and West starting with capital letters.
Swedish North is north
The Swedish language does not use capital letters. You just have to go with the flow.
Australia
And don't get me started on the way the water runs down the plughole in the bath in Australia.
Or Christmas in June.
Useful Websites
https://www.geospatialworld.net/blogs/why-maps-point-north-on-top/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North
https://thepointsguy.com/2017/07/travel-myths-backwards-water/
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