KIR4: Difference between revisions

From All Skies Encyclopaedia
KIR4
Sushoff (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Sushoff (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{DISPLAYTITLE:<sup>mul</sup>KIR<sub>4</sub>, ''būşu''}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:<sup>mul</sup>KIR<sub>4</sub>, ''būšu''}}
{{distinguish|Buššānītu}}
{{distinguish|Buššānītu}}
Authors: {{PAGEAUTHORS}}
Authors: {{PAGEAUTHORS}}
----
----


<sup>mul</sup>KIR<sub>4</sub> = ''būşu'', Hyena-star an ancient Mesopotamian asterism.  
<sup>mul</sup>KIR<sub>4</sub> = ''būšu'', Hyena-star an ancient Mesopotamian asterism that occurs in calendrical-mythological tex.  See also [[Buššānītu]].  


==Concordance, Etymology, History<ref>[[Mesopotamian (All Terms)|Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0]], All Skies Encyclopaedia.</ref>==
==Concordance, Etymology, History<ref>[[Mesopotamian (All Terms)|Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0]], All Skies Encyclopaedia.</ref>==
   
   
<sup>mul</sup>KIR<sub>4</sub> = ''būşu'', 'Hyena-star' occurs in a calendrical mythological work. See Reynolds 2019: 206-207 with the relevant passage sub.
<sup>mul</sup>KIR<sub>4</sub> = ''būšu'', 'Hyena-star' occurs in a calendrical mythological work. See Reynolds 2019: 206-207: 11-12 quoted sub. ''Gizzānītu''. 
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"


Line 35: Line 35:
* [[References (Babylonian)|Kurtik's references]]
* [[References (Babylonian)|Kurtik's references]]


[[Category:Mesopotamian]] [[Category:Constellation]] [[Category:West Asian]] [[Category:Eurasia]]
 
[[Category:Mesopotamian]] [[Category:Asterism]] [[Category:Constellation]] [[Category:West Asian]] [[Category:Asian]] [[Category:Eurasia]]
[[Category:Cuneiform]]
[[Category:Cuneiform]]


[[Category:4work]]
[[Category:4work]]

Latest revision as of 06:18, 2 July 2026

Authors: Susanne M Hoffmann, Wayne Horowitz, Youla Azkarrula


mulKIR4 = būšu, Hyena-star an ancient Mesopotamian asterism that occurs in calendrical-mythological tex. See also Buššānītu.

Concordance, Etymology, History[1]

mulKIR4 = būšu, 'Hyena-star' occurs in a calendrical mythological work. See Reynolds 2019: 206-207: 11-12 quoted sub. Gizzānītu.

Sources Identifications
Example Example
Example Example

additional

Historical Dictionaries

Kurtik (2022) Gössmann (1950)
not in Kurtik

References

  1. Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0, All Skies Encyclopaedia.