by Anthony Barreiro » Mon Jul 08, 2013 11:50 pm
Boomer12k wrote:xerhino wrote:I have to agree with Boomer12k, Zeus does come to mind pretty readily, given the locale. Having an astronomy photo that stirs up thoughts of mythology brings art and science together. Nice work.
A lot of the Constellations, even some stars, are Mythology...which was not just someone's story telling in old times, but was someone's religion after all....The "gods" and even people who became "gods"...Hercules...
Planet names are Greco-Roman Myth and Religion. Some if not all had a Temple or Shrine. Astronomy, has a Mythological and Religious past...That has become a Science.
I am wondering....what constellation was the constellation of Hercules, before it became the constellation of Hercules...because those stars no doubt existed before that...so what did they break up, or change to make it Hercules???
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Hi Boomer. I've been in the mountains, away from the internet, and now that I'm back I'm catching up on apod's. The constellation that the Greeks called Herakles (Hercules to the Romans) was probably adopted from the Babylonians, who may have inherited it from the Sumerians before them, but the original story seems to have been lost in transit, so this constellation was originally rather mysterious to the Greeks. The wikipedia article on
Hercules gives a good summary.
The Babylonians were accomplished astronomers and astrologers, by the way. They calculated the saros cycle of solar and lunar eclipses and were able to predict when and where they would occur, which would be partial and which full, etc.
http://cdli.ox.ac.uk/wiki/doku.php?id=a ... _astronomy
[quote="Boomer12k"][quote="xerhino"]I have to agree with Boomer12k, Zeus does come to mind pretty readily, given the locale. Having an astronomy photo that stirs up thoughts of mythology brings art and science together. Nice work.[/quote]
A lot of the Constellations, even some stars, are Mythology...which was not just someone's story telling in old times, but was someone's religion after all....The "gods" and even people who became "gods"...Hercules...
Planet names are Greco-Roman Myth and Religion. Some if not all had a Temple or Shrine. Astronomy, has a Mythological and Religious past...That has become a Science.
I am wondering....what constellation was the constellation of Hercules, before it became the constellation of Hercules...because those stars no doubt existed before that...so what did they break up, or change to make it Hercules???
:---[===] *[/quote]
Hi Boomer. I've been in the mountains, away from the internet, and now that I'm back I'm catching up on apod's. The constellation that the Greeks called Herakles (Hercules to the Romans) was probably adopted from the Babylonians, who may have inherited it from the Sumerians before them, but the original story seems to have been lost in transit, so this constellation was originally rather mysterious to the Greeks. The wikipedia article on [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hercules_(constellation)#History]Hercules[/url] gives a good summary.
The Babylonians were accomplished astronomers and astrologers, by the way. They calculated the saros cycle of solar and lunar eclipses and were able to predict when and where they would occur, which would be partial and which full, etc. http://cdli.ox.ac.uk/wiki/doku.php?id=akkadian_astronomy