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Ancient Near East - Soltysiak, Arkadiusz. Time and Astronomy in Past Cultures  

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Soltysiak, Arkadiusz. Time and Astronomy in Past Cultures  

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Title:Time and Astronomy in Past Cultures
Series:Gorgias Précis Portfolios 6
Availability:In Print
Publisher:Gorgias Press

Edited by Arkadiusz Soltysiak
ISBN:978-1-60724-668-8
Availability:In Print
Publication Date:10/2009
Language:English
Format:Hardback, Black, 7 x 10 in
Pages:188
 

The volume contains selected papers presented at the conference "Time and Astronomy in Past Cultures" which was held in Torun, Poland early spring 2005. The meeting was organised as a commemoration o the late Andrzej Wiercinski (1930-2003) who in mid-1970s initiated in Poland the scholarly research on astronomy in culture and ancient calendars. Among 12 papers published in the present book, five concern Near Eastern calendars and sky-watching, three are devoted to European archaeoastronomy (including a paper on Stonehenge), two represent ethnoarchaeological research in the Baltic area.



Table of Contents
  • Cover page (page 3)
  • Copyright (page 4)
  • Table of contents (page 7)
  • Preface (page 9)
  • Complete list of papers presented at the conference (page 11)
  • The Calendar in the Flood Narrative (page 15)
    • Abstract (page 15)
    • A. State of the field (page 16)
    • B. Quantitative (or absolute) numbers (page 18)
    • C. Relative numbers (page 22)
    • D. The first date in the relative numerical system (page 24)
    • E. How and when dates are changed? (page 28)
    • F. Changed dates … changed calendars (page 29)
    • Conclusion (page 33)
    • Abbreviations (page 34)
  • Sabbatical Calendar and Priestly Narrative (page 35)
    • Abstract (page 35)
    • 1. First Key: the Sabbatical Calendar (page 36)
    • 2. Second Key: the Priestly Document (page 38)
    • 3. Third Key: the Priestly Narrative as a Week of Seven Eras (page 42)
    • 4.1. Day 1: Creation, the first week (page 43)
    • 4.2. Day 2: Antediluvian Era (page 44)
    • 4.3. Day 3: Re-Creation (page 44)
    • 4.4. Day 4: Postdiluvian Era: orphans, barren women and exiles (page 46)
    • 4.5. Day 5: Exodic Era (page 47)
    • 4.6. Day 6: Wilderness (page 47)
    • 4.7. Day 7: Shabbat (page 48)
    • 5. Conclusion (page 49)
  • Mesopotamian Influence on Persian Sky-watching and Calendar (page 53)
    • Abstract (page 53)
    • Introduction (page 53)
    • Mithra and Shamash (page 54)
    • The reform of Artaxerxes II (page 58)
    • Solar festivals in Persian calendar (page 59)
    • Conclusion (page 61)
    • Abbreviations (page 61)
    • Bibliography (page 62)
  • The Philosophy of Time and Time Telling Devices in the Early Islamic World (page 65)
    • Abstract (page 65)
    • Muslim conception of time and sociological/theologicalapproaches (page 68)
    • The abstraction of time … A brief survey on early Islamic timetellingdevices (page 72)
    • Conclusion (page 73)
    • Bibliography (page 73)
  • On Timekeeping by the Lunar Mansions in Medieval Egypt (page 77)
    • Abstract (page 77)
    • 1. The method (page 77)
      • 1.1. The lunar mansions in Islamic astronomy (page 79)
      • 1.2. Timekeeping by night by means of the lunar mansions (page 79)
      • 1.3. al-Siqillis treatise on timekeeping by means of the lunar mansions (page 80)
    • 2. The presentation (page 84)
      • 2.1. Folk astronomy and scientific astronomy in medieval Islamic societies (page 84)
      • 2.2. Al-Siqillšs arrangement of the material (page 85)
    • 3. Appendix: The Pleiades (page 86)
    • Bibliography (page 88)
  • Music in the Iconography of Venus Children (page 91)
    • Figures (page 97)
  • Chronotypic Variation among Early and Middle Neolithic Societes in Poland (page 103)
    • Abstract (page 103)
    • Introduction (page 103)
    • Temporal orientation of Mesolithic foragers and first farmersin north European Plain (page 105)
    • Varieties of social time among LBK and post-LBK communities (page 106)
    • Visibility and orientations of LBK longhouses (page 108)
    • Enclosures (page 109)
    • Social time in FBC communities (page 109)
    • Temporal Orientation of GAC communities (page 112)
    • Conclusions (page 113)
    • Bibliography (page 114)
  • Ethnographic Correlates of One Type of Soli-lunar Alignment: The Doubling ofWinter Solstice Sunset with the Southern (Minor or Major) Standstill Moonsets (page 119)
    • Abstract (page 119)
    • Recent shifts in archaeology and anthropology (page 119)
    • Testing these models by the archaeoastronomy of ancient monuments (page 121)
    • Recent archaeoastronomy (page 122)
    • The main alignment at Stonehenge (page 122)
    • Previous interpretations of the Stonehenge main alignment (page 125)
    • Remaining properties of a horizon alignment on a lunar standstill (page 127)
    • Remaining interpretations from horizon properties of a lunar standstill (page 130)
    • Conclusion (page 130)
    • Bibliography (page 131)
  • The Calendar of Coligny and Related Calendars (page 135)
    • Abstract (page 135)
    • 1. A first analysis (page 135)
    • 2. The origin of the calendar (page 136)
    • 3. Research history (page 137)
    • 4. Relation to other calendars (page 138)
    • Bibliography (page 139)
  • The Medieval Liturgical Calendar, Sacred Space, and the Orientations of Churches (page 141)
    • Abstract (page 141)
  • The Finnish Wooden Calendars and Some Aspects of Folk Knowledge in the Middle Ages (page 151)
    • Abstract (page 151)
    • Introduction (page 151)
    • Calendar sticks (page 154)
    • Distribution (page 154)
    • Signs (page 155)
    • Runic calendars (page 156)
    • Streak calendars (page 157)
    • Notch calendars (page 158)
    • The oldest known Finnish calendar (page 158)
    • Traditional time reckoning and feasts (page 159)
    • Conclusions (page 167)
    • Acknowledgements (page 167)
    • Bibliography (page 167)
  • The Observation of Celestial Bodies and Time Counting in the Lithuanian Folk Culture (page 169)
    • Abstract (page 169)
    • I. The Sun (page 169)
      • Determination of the time of the day (page 169)
      • Determination of the calendar time (page 172)
    • II. The Moon (page 174)
      • Daytime measurement (page 175)
      • Calendar time determination (page 175)
    • III. Stars (page 178)
      • 1. Pleiades (page 178)
        • 1.1. Hour estimation (page 178)
        • 1.2. Timing of agricultural activities and meteorological observations (page 179)
          • 1.2.1. Evening (heliacal) setting (page 180)
          • 1.2.2. Morning (heliacal) rising (page 180)
          • 1.2.3. Morning culmination (page 180)
          • 1.2.4. Morning (cosmic) setting (page 181)
          • 1.2.5. Evening (achronal) rising and evening culmination (page 181)
      • 2. Orion (page 181)
        • 2.1. Hour estimation (page 181)
        • 2.2. Estimation of calendar day (page 182)
      • 3. Ursa Major (page 183)
        • 3.1. Hour estimation (page 183)
      • 4. Venus (page 185)
    • IV. Time conception in traditional Lithuanian culture (page 186)
    • Acknowledgements (page 187)
    • Abbreviations (page 187)
    • Bibliography (page 188)
    • Unpublished sources (page 189)



Soltysiak, Arkadiusz. Time and Astronomy in Past Cultures
ISBN:978-1-60724-668-8
Weight:1 LBS.
Price:$160.25
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