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[[File:Capricornus IAU.svg|alt=star chart|thumb|Cap star chart (IAU and Sky & Telescope magazine, Roger Sinnott & Rick Fienberg).]]
[[File:Capricornus IAU.svg|alt=star chart|thumb|Cap star chart (IAU and Sky & Telescope magazine, Roger Sinnott & Rick Fienberg).]]
One of the [[:Category:88_IAU-Constellations|88 IAU constellations]].  
Capricornus, The Goat-Horned, is one of the [[:Category:88_IAU-Constellations|88 IAU constellations]]. This hybrid creature, half fish, half goat, is a faithful companion of Ea, the Babylonian god of wisdom. It is certain that this constellation came from Babylon with the zodiac. There it was called the goat-fish and was a benign demon used in numerous cults, e.g. in the cult of medicine. It was therefore often depicted in images – not necessarily the constellation itself, but illustrations of the demon have been preserved in reliefs and sculptures.  


==Etymology and History==
==Etymology and History==
The Greek constellation ... 
===Origin of Constellation===
The origin is Mesopotamian.


The figure of the goatfish also reappears in art during the Roman period: a goatfish is depicted on the zodiac of Dendera in Egypt, which dates from the 1st century BC, and in Ptolemy's star catalogue, the names of the stars suggest that he thought the same. Both sources date from the Greco-Roman period, which means that even the depiction in Dendera is no longer truly Egyptian, but rather an Egyptianisation of foreign – i.e. Greek and Babylonian – constellations. The figures depicted here in Egyptian style are a cultural mixture, although it is unclear whether the Babylonian influences came to Egypt directly from Babylon or via the Greek conquerors.


===Origin of Constellation===
The figure of the goat fish has been used equally in Arabic and Latin medieval times since at least late antiquity, thus extending from Ptolemy to the last pictorial star charts in the 18th/19th century. In English, this figure is usually called ‘Capricorn’, although in Greek it actually means ‘the goat-horned’. The official name of the constellation in the IAU is also ‘Sea-Goat’, so the German form ‘Steinbock’ is simply a misnomer.
 
According to Eratosthenes, this refers to a deity that resembles Aigipan in appearance, because the depiction is inspired by him. Eratosthenes describes him as a figure with the lower body of an animal and horns on his head. However, the upper body is that of a man. On the Farnese Globe, whose model dates back to Hellenistic times, only the goat's head is depicted. The rest of the figure is missing due to architectural features that obscure the globe in this southernmost region of the sky. Since it is a goat's head and chest and not a human head with horns, the depiction here is probably also intended to be a goatfish and not an Aigipan.


==== Babylonian ====
==== Babylonian ====
Line 12: Line 18:
==== Greco-Roman ====
==== Greco-Roman ====


===== Aratos =====
===== Aratus =====
[290?] Grievous then is the crashing swoop of the South winds when the Sun joins Aegoceros, and then is the frost from heaven hard on the benumbed sailor. Not but that throughout the year’s length the sea ever grows dark beneath the keels, and, like to diving seagulls, we often sit, spying out the deep from our ship with faces turned to the shore; but ever farther back the shores are swept by the waves and only a thin plank staves off Death.
<blockquote>Capricorn lies ahead and lower down, where the powerful sun turns back. [287] In that month I hope you will not be surged about by the sea through taking to open waters. Neither by day can you make much headway, for the days pass most swiftly then, [290] nor in your terror by night will the dawn  come soon, however much you cry out. It is then that the dread southerlies strike, when the sun meets up with Capricorn; then the icy cold from Zeus is more cruel to the freezing sailor. But for that matter [295] the sea surges under the stem all the year long; and we, like diving shearwaters, often sit gazing round the ocean from our ships, turning our eyes towards the beaches; but the surf there is still far off, and only a little timber keeps death away. (Kidd 1997)</blockquote>
===== Eratosthenes =====


[683] His head, hand and waist set at the rising of Aegoceros [Capricorn]; from waist to foot he sets at the rising of the Archer. Nor do Perseus and the end of the stern of jeweled Argo remain on high, but Perseus sets all save his knee and right foot and Argo is gone save her curved stern. She sinks wholly at the rising of Aegoceros, when Procyon sets too, and there rise the Bird and the Eagle and the gems of the winged Arrow and the sacred Altar, that is established in the South.
===== Ovid, Fasti 1 =====
<blockquote>[651] When that is over, thou wilt quit Capricorn, O Phoebus, and wilt take thy course through the sign of the youth who carries water (Aquarius). (James George Frazer 1931)</blockquote>


[700] Yet many a coil of the Hydra remains, but Night engulfs her wholly with the Centaur, when the Fishes [Pisces] rise; with the Fishes the Fish which is placed beneath azure Aegoceros rises – not completely but par awaits another sign of the Zodiac.
===== Hipparchus =====


(Kidd 1997)
====== Rising (Lib II Cap V §10) ======
<blockquote>The Rising of ...</blockquote>
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!
! colspan="2" |east
! colspan="2" |south
|-
!
!lam1
!lam2
!lam1
!lam2
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|star
|
|
|
|
|-
|duration
| colspan="4" |2 1/8 hours = 127.5 min = 31 7/8 degree
|}


===== Eratosthenes =====
====== Setting (Lib II Cap VI §10) ======
{| class="wikitable"
!
! colspan="2" |west
! colspan="2" |south
|-
!
!lam1
!lam2
!lam1
!lam2
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|star
|
|
|
|
|-
|duration
| colspan="4" |2 2/3 hours = 160 min = 40°
|}


===== Ovid, Fasti 1 =====
====== Stars Mentioned ======
[651] When that is over, thou wilt quit Capricorn, O Phoebus, and wilt take thy course through the sign of the youth who carries water (Aquarius).
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!
!Greek
!German
!English
!ident.
!src
!
!lam_culm
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|Lib II Cap V §10
|rising, east, first
|
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|Lib II Cap V §10
|rising, east, last
|
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|Lib II Cap VI §2
|setting CrB, south, last
|Psc 13.5
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|Lib II Cap VI §13
|setting Aql, south, first
|Ari 2
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|Lib III Cap I §9
|rising Ori, south, last
|Psc 13
|}


Ovid. Fasti. Translated by Frazer, James George. Loeb Classical Library Volume. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1931.
===== Hyginus, Astronomica =====
<blockquote>This sign resembles Aegipan, whom Jupiter wished to be put among the constellations because he was nourished with him, just as he put the goat nurse we have mentioned before. He, first, as Eratosthenes says, when Jupiter attacked the Titans, is said to have cast into the enemy the fear that is called panikos. The lower part of his body has fish formation, because he hurled shellfish against the enemy, too, instead of stones.


===== Hipparchus =====
Egyptian priests and some poets say that once when many gods had assembled in Egypt, suddenly Typhon, an exceedingly fierce monster and deadly enemy of the gods, came to that place. Terrified by him, they changed their shapes into other forms: Mercury became an ibis, Apollo, the bird that is called Thracian, Diana, a cat. For this reason they say the Egyptians do not permit these creatures to be injured, because they are called representations of gods. At this same time, they say, Pan cast himself into the river, making the lower part of his body a fish, and the rest a goat, and thus escaped from Typhon. Jove, admiring his shrewdness, put his likeness among the constellations. (Mary Ward 1960)</blockquote>


===== Geminos =====
===== Geminos =====
Line 196: Line 326:
|
|
|}
|}
[[File:Aigokeros Youla CH.png|thumb|Convex Hull for the stars inside Aigokeros (CC BY Youla Azkarrula).]]
===== Stars within the Constellation Area =====
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible"
|+
!id
!Label
!IAU design.
!description
!Vmag
|-
|1
|Deneb Algedi
|HIP 107556
|Constellation lines (Vertex)
|2.83
|-
|2
|Dabih
|HIP 100345
|Constellation lines
|3.08
|-
|3
|Algedi
|HIP 100064
|Constellation lines (Vertex)
|3.58
|-
|4
|Nashira
|HIP 106985
|Constellation lines
|3.67
|-
|5
|ζ Capricorni
|HIP 105881
|Constellation lines (Vertex)
|3.74
|-
|6
|θ Capricorni
|HIP 104139
|Constellation lines
|4.07
|-
|7
|ω Capricorni
|HIP 102978
|Constellation lines (Vertex)
|4.12
|-
|8
|ψ Capricorni
|HIP 102485
|Constellation lines
|4.122
|-
|9
|ι Capricorni
|HIP 105515
|Constellation lines
|4.27
|-
|10
|24 Cap
|HIP 104234
|Constellation lines (Vertex)
|4.5
|-
|11
|36 Cap
|HIP 106039
|Inside the hull
|4.5
|-
|12
|ϵ Capricorni
|HIP 106723
|Constellation lines
|4.55
|-
|13
|κ Capricorni
|HIP 107188
|Constellation lines (Vertex)
|4.726
|-
|14
|Alshat
|HIP 100310
|Constellation lines
|4.76
|-
|15
|η Capricorni
|HIP 104019
|Inside the hull
|4.84
|-
|16
|* rho Cap A
|HD 194943A
|Inside the hull
|4.93
|-
|17
|υ Capricorni
|HIP 101984
|Inside the hull
|5.1
|-
|18
|π Capricorni
|HIP 100881
|Inside the hull
|5.14
|-
|19
|ϕ Capricorni
|HIP 104963
|Inside the hull
|5.152
|-
|20
|σ Capricorni
|HIP 100195
|Constellation lines (Vertex)
|5.265
|-
|21
|χ Capricorni
|HIP 104365
|Inside the hull
|5.316
|-
|22
|29 Cap
|HIP 104974
|Inside the hull
|5.317
|-
|23
|33 Cap
|HIP 105665
|Inside the hull
|5.366
|-
|24
|* 14 Cap A
|HIP 101923
|Inside the hull
|5.38
|-
|25
|30 Cap
|HIP 105143
|Inside the hull
|5.383
|-
|26
| -
|HIP 105576
|Inside the hull
|5.6
|-
|27
|37 Cap
|HIP 106559
|Inside the hull
|5.696
|-
|28
| -
|HIP 103389
|Inside the hull
|5.7
|-
|29
|35 Cap
|HIP 105928
|Inside the hull
|5.76
|-
|30
|19 Cap
|HIP 103226
|Inside the hull
|5.782
|-
|31
| -
|HIP 102026
|Inside the hull
|5.799
|-
|32
| -
|HIP 102772
|Inside the hull
|5.849
|-
|33
|ξ 2 Capricorni
|HIP 99572
|Constellation lines (Vertex)
|5.85
|-
|34
| -
|HIP 103460
|Inside the hull
|5.869
|-
|35
|ο 1 Capricorni
|HIP 101123
|Constellation lines
|5.897
|-
|36
|17 Cap
|HIP 102487
|Inside the hull
|5.902
|-
|37
|DV Aqr
|HIP 103545
|Inside the hull
|5.963
|-
|38
| -
|HIP 104914
|Inside the hull
|6.037
|-
|39
|21 Cap
|HIP 103703
|Inside the hull
|6.05
|-
|40
|β2 Cap
|HIP 100325
|Inside the hull
|6.1
|-
|41
| -
|HIP 101221
|Inside the hull
|6.11
|-
|42
| -
|HIP 101507
|Inside the hull
|6.116
|-
|43
| -
|HIP 104297
|Inside the hull
|6.17
|-
|44
| -
|HIP 101608
|Inside the hull
|6.177
|-
|45
| -
|HIP 102780
|Inside the hull
|6.193
|-
|46
|27 Cap
|HIP 104452
|Inside the hull
|6.242
|-
|47
|20 Cap
|HIP 103616
|Inside the hull
|6.25
|-
|48
| -
|HIP 101997
|Inside the hull
|6.37
|-
|49
| -
|HIP 105662
|Inside the hull
|6.373
|-
|50
| -
|HIP 101011
|Inside the hull
|6.41
|-
|51
| -
|HR 7989
|Inside the hull
|6.47
|-
|52
|* rho Cap B
|HD 194943B
|Inside the hull
|6.88
|}
===Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation===
===Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation===


==Mythology==
==Mythology/ Religion==
'''Babylonian'''
 
In Mesopotamian religion, the goatfish was an attribute or representation of the god Ea. Already in Sumerian times, Ea was considered one of the highest gods and, in the Babylonian pantheon, the one who always helped humans when other gods wanted to punish them. Illnesses were also interpreted as punishment from the gods, and the goatfish was the benign demon associated with Ea who helped people recover.
 
'''Greek'''
 
It is unclear whether Aigipan is always equivalent to Pan. In any case, this deity is probably a foster brother of Zeus. Aigipan therefore supported the Olympian gods in their battle against the Titans. He is said to have found a shell, which is called ‘pan’ because of the sound it makes. When the Titans heard this sound, they fled.


==Weblinks==
==Weblinks==
Line 218: Line 679:
[[Category:Modern]]
[[Category:Modern]]
[[Category:88 IAU-Constellations]]  
[[Category:88 IAU-Constellations]]  
[[Category:European]]
[[Category:European]][[Category:Zodiac]]
[[Category:4work]]
[[Category:4work]]

Latest revision as of 11:42, 26 February 2026

Authors: Susanne M Hoffmann, Youla Azkarrula, Doris Vickers


star chart
Cap star chart (IAU and Sky & Telescope magazine, Roger Sinnott & Rick Fienberg).

Capricornus, The Goat-Horned, is one of the 88 IAU constellations. This hybrid creature, half fish, half goat, is a faithful companion of Ea, the Babylonian god of wisdom. It is certain that this constellation came from Babylon with the zodiac. There it was called the goat-fish and was a benign demon used in numerous cults, e.g. in the cult of medicine. It was therefore often depicted in images – not necessarily the constellation itself, but illustrations of the demon have been preserved in reliefs and sculptures.

Etymology and History

Origin of Constellation

The origin is Mesopotamian.

The figure of the goatfish also reappears in art during the Roman period: a goatfish is depicted on the zodiac of Dendera in Egypt, which dates from the 1st century BC, and in Ptolemy's star catalogue, the names of the stars suggest that he thought the same. Both sources date from the Greco-Roman period, which means that even the depiction in Dendera is no longer truly Egyptian, but rather an Egyptianisation of foreign – i.e. Greek and Babylonian – constellations. The figures depicted here in Egyptian style are a cultural mixture, although it is unclear whether the Babylonian influences came to Egypt directly from Babylon or via the Greek conquerors.

The figure of the goat fish has been used equally in Arabic and Latin medieval times since at least late antiquity, thus extending from Ptolemy to the last pictorial star charts in the 18th/19th century. In English, this figure is usually called ‘Capricorn’, although in Greek it actually means ‘the goat-horned’. The official name of the constellation in the IAU is also ‘Sea-Goat’, so the German form ‘Steinbock’ is simply a misnomer.

According to Eratosthenes, this refers to a deity that resembles Aigipan in appearance, because the depiction is inspired by him. Eratosthenes describes him as a figure with the lower body of an animal and horns on his head. However, the upper body is that of a man. On the Farnese Globe, whose model dates back to Hellenistic times, only the goat's head is depicted. The rest of the figure is missing due to architectural features that obscure the globe in this southernmost region of the sky. Since it is a goat's head and chest and not a human head with horns, the depiction here is probably also intended to be a goatfish and not an Aigipan.

Babylonian

Greco-Roman

Aratus

Capricorn lies ahead and lower down, where the powerful sun turns back. [287] In that month I hope you will not be surged about by the sea through taking to open waters. Neither by day can you make much headway, for the days pass most swiftly then, [290] nor in your terror by night will the dawn come soon, however much you cry out. It is then that the dread southerlies strike, when the sun meets up with Capricorn; then the icy cold from Zeus is more cruel to the freezing sailor. But for that matter [295] the sea surges under the stem all the year long; and we, like diving shearwaters, often sit gazing round the ocean from our ships, turning our eyes towards the beaches; but the surf there is still far off, and only a little timber keeps death away. (Kidd 1997)

Eratosthenes
Ovid, Fasti 1

[651] When that is over, thou wilt quit Capricorn, O Phoebus, and wilt take thy course through the sign of the youth who carries water (Aquarius). (James George Frazer 1931)

Hipparchus
Rising (Lib II Cap V §10)

The Rising of ...

east south
lam1 lam2 lam1 lam2
star
duration 2 1/8 hours = 127.5 min = 31 7/8 degree
Setting (Lib II Cap VI §10)
west south
lam1 lam2 lam1 lam2
star
duration 2 2/3 hours = 160 min = 40°
Stars Mentioned
Greek German English ident. src lam_culm
Lib II Cap V §10 rising, east, first
Lib II Cap V §10 rising, east, last
Lib II Cap VI §2 setting CrB, south, last Psc 13.5
Lib II Cap VI §13 setting Aql, south, first Ari 2
Lib III Cap I §9 rising Ori, south, last Psc 13
Hyginus, Astronomica

This sign resembles Aegipan, whom Jupiter wished to be put among the constellations because he was nourished with him, just as he put the goat nurse we have mentioned before. He, first, as Eratosthenes says, when Jupiter attacked the Titans, is said to have cast into the enemy the fear that is called panikos. The lower part of his body has fish formation, because he hurled shellfish against the enemy, too, instead of stones. Egyptian priests and some poets say that once when many gods had assembled in Egypt, suddenly Typhon, an exceedingly fierce monster and deadly enemy of the gods, came to that place. Terrified by him, they changed their shapes into other forms: Mercury became an ibis, Apollo, the bird that is called Thracian, Diana, a cat. For this reason they say the Egyptians do not permit these creatures to be injured, because they are called representations of gods. At this same time, they say, Pan cast himself into the river, making the lower part of his body a fish, and the rest a goat, and thus escaped from Typhon. Jove, admiring his shrewdness, put his likeness among the constellations. (Mary Ward 1960)

Geminos

Almagest Αἰγόκερως.

id Greek

(Heiberg 1898)

English

(Toomer 1984)

ident.
Αἰγόκερω ἀστερισμός. Constellation of Capricornus
1 ὁ τῶν ἐν τῷ ἐπομένῳ κέρατι γ’ ὁ βόρειος. The northernmost of' the 3 stars in the rear horn alf1 + alf2 Cap
2 ὁ μέσος αὐτῶν The middle one of these nu Cap
3 ὁ νότιος τῶν τριῶη. The southernmost of the three bet Cap
4 ὁ ἐπ’ ἄκρου τοῦ ἠγουμένου κέρατος The star on the tip of the advance horn xi1 + xi2 Cap
5 τῶν ἐν τῷ ῥόγχει γ' ὁ φότιος. The star on the tip of the advance horn omi Cap
6 τῶν λοιπῶν β’ ὁ ἠχούμενος. The more advanced of the other two pi Cap
ὁ ἑπόμενος αὐτῶν. The rearmost of these rho Cap
ὁ τῶν ἡ προηγούμενος ὑπὸ τὸν δεξιὸυ ὀφθαλμόν. The star in advance of the [above] 3, under the right eye sig Cap
τῶν ἐν τῷ τραχήλῳ β ὁ βορειότερος The northernmost of the 2 stars in the neck tau Cap
ὁ νοτιώτερος αὐτῶν The southernmost of them ups Cap
ὁ ἐπὶ τοῦ ἀριστεροῦ κεκαμμένον γόνατος. The star on the left, doubled-up knee ome Cap
ὁ ὑπὸ τὸ δεξιὸν γονάτιοη. The star under the right knee psi Cap
ὁ ἐπὶ τοῦ ἀριστεροῦ ὅμου. The star on the left shoulder 24 Cap
τῶν ὑπὸ τὴν κοιλίαυ συνεχῶν β’ ὁ ἠγούμενος The more advanced of the 2 stars close tagether under the belly zet Cap
ὁ ἐπόμενος αὐτῶν. The rcarmost of these 36 Cap
τῶν ἐν μέσῳ τῷ σώματι γ’ ὁ ἐπόμενος Thc rearmost of the 3 stars in the middle of the body phi Cap
τῶν λοιπῶν καὶ ἠγουμένωυ β ὁ νοτιώτερος. The southernmost of the other, advance 2 chi Cap
ὁ βορειότερος αὐτῶν. The northernmost of them eta Cap
τῶν ἐν τῷ νώτῳ β’ ὁ προηγούμευος. The more advanced of the 2 stars in thc back tet Cap
ὁ ἐπόμενος αὐτῶν The rearmost of them iot Cap
τῶν ἐν τῇ νοτίῳ ἀκάνθη β ὁ προηγούμενος. The more advanced of the 2 stars in thc southern spine eps Cap
ὁ ἐπόμενος αὐτῶν The rcannost of them kap Cap
τῶν ἐν τῷ παρούρῳ ῇ ὁ προηγούμενος. The more advanced ofthe 2 stars in the section [ofthe body] next to the tail gam Cap
ὁ ἐπόμενος αὐτῶν Thc rearmost of them del Cap
τῶν ἐπὶ τοῦ βορείου μέρους τῆς οὐρᾶς δ ὁ προηγούμενος. Tbc most advanccd of the 4 stars on thc northern portion of the tail 42 Cap
τῶν λοιπῶν γ’ ὁ τότιος The southernmost of the other 3 mu Cap
ὁ μέσος αὐτῶν Thc midd!e one of thcsc lam Cap
ὁ βόρειος αὐτῶν καὶ ἐπ’ ἄκρου τοῦ οὐραίου, The northernmost of them, on the end of the tail-lin 46 Cap
ἀστέρες κη, ὥν γ’ μεγέθους ὅ, δ’ ὅ, ε θ,ς ς. 28 stars, 4 of the third rnagnitude, 9 of the fourth, 9 of the fifth, 6 of the sixth
Convex Hull for the stars inside Aigokeros (CC BY Youla Azkarrula).
Stars within the Constellation Area
id Label IAU design. description Vmag
1 Deneb Algedi HIP 107556 Constellation lines (Vertex) 2.83
2 Dabih HIP 100345 Constellation lines 3.08
3 Algedi HIP 100064 Constellation lines (Vertex) 3.58
4 Nashira HIP 106985 Constellation lines 3.67
5 ζ Capricorni HIP 105881 Constellation lines (Vertex) 3.74
6 θ Capricorni HIP 104139 Constellation lines 4.07
7 ω Capricorni HIP 102978 Constellation lines (Vertex) 4.12
8 ψ Capricorni HIP 102485 Constellation lines 4.122
9 ι Capricorni HIP 105515 Constellation lines 4.27
10 24 Cap HIP 104234 Constellation lines (Vertex) 4.5
11 36 Cap HIP 106039 Inside the hull 4.5
12 ϵ Capricorni HIP 106723 Constellation lines 4.55
13 κ Capricorni HIP 107188 Constellation lines (Vertex) 4.726
14 Alshat HIP 100310 Constellation lines 4.76
15 η Capricorni HIP 104019 Inside the hull 4.84
16 * rho Cap A HD 194943A Inside the hull 4.93
17 υ Capricorni HIP 101984 Inside the hull 5.1
18 π Capricorni HIP 100881 Inside the hull 5.14
19 ϕ Capricorni HIP 104963 Inside the hull 5.152
20 σ Capricorni HIP 100195 Constellation lines (Vertex) 5.265
21 χ Capricorni HIP 104365 Inside the hull 5.316
22 29 Cap HIP 104974 Inside the hull 5.317
23 33 Cap HIP 105665 Inside the hull 5.366
24 * 14 Cap A HIP 101923 Inside the hull 5.38
25 30 Cap HIP 105143 Inside the hull 5.383
26 - HIP 105576 Inside the hull 5.6
27 37 Cap HIP 106559 Inside the hull 5.696
28 - HIP 103389 Inside the hull 5.7
29 35 Cap HIP 105928 Inside the hull 5.76
30 19 Cap HIP 103226 Inside the hull 5.782
31 - HIP 102026 Inside the hull 5.799
32 - HIP 102772 Inside the hull 5.849
33 ξ 2 Capricorni HIP 99572 Constellation lines (Vertex) 5.85
34 - HIP 103460 Inside the hull 5.869
35 ο 1 Capricorni HIP 101123 Constellation lines 5.897
36 17 Cap HIP 102487 Inside the hull 5.902
37 DV Aqr HIP 103545 Inside the hull 5.963
38 - HIP 104914 Inside the hull 6.037
39 21 Cap HIP 103703 Inside the hull 6.05
40 β2 Cap HIP 100325 Inside the hull 6.1
41 - HIP 101221 Inside the hull 6.11
42 - HIP 101507 Inside the hull 6.116
43 - HIP 104297 Inside the hull 6.17
44 - HIP 101608 Inside the hull 6.177
45 - HIP 102780 Inside the hull 6.193
46 27 Cap HIP 104452 Inside the hull 6.242
47 20 Cap HIP 103616 Inside the hull 6.25
48 - HIP 101997 Inside the hull 6.37
49 - HIP 105662 Inside the hull 6.373
50 - HIP 101011 Inside the hull 6.41
51 - HR 7989 Inside the hull 6.47
52 * rho Cap B HD 194943B Inside the hull 6.88

Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation

Mythology/ Religion

Babylonian

In Mesopotamian religion, the goatfish was an attribute or representation of the god Ea. Already in Sumerian times, Ea was considered one of the highest gods and, in the Babylonian pantheon, the one who always helped humans when other gods wanted to punish them. Illnesses were also interpreted as punishment from the gods, and the goatfish was the benign demon associated with Ea who helped people recover.

Greek

It is unclear whether Aigipan is always equivalent to Pan. In any case, this deity is probably a foster brother of Zeus. Aigipan therefore supported the Olympian gods in their battle against the Titans. He is said to have found a shell, which is called ‘pan’ because of the sound it makes. When the Titans heard this sound, they fled.

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