UDU.NITA2: Difference between revisions
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Authors: Gennady E. Kurtik, {{PAGEAUTHORS}}, Euin Choung Kim | Authors: Gennady E. Kurtik, {{PAGEAUTHORS}}, Euin Choung Kim | ||
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<sup>mul</sup>UDU.NITA<sub>2</sub> (𒀯𒇻𒀴), The Ram, is the star at the head of the staff in <sup>mul</sup>[[GAM3|gam<sub>3</sub>]] = ''gamlu'', 'The Crook,' ([[Auriga]]) as identified in Uranology Texts and the star-list VR 46: <sup>mul</sup>udu.nita<sub>2</sub> = sag.du <sup>mul</sup>gam<sub>3</sub>, 'The Ram' = the head of 'The Crook.' In VR 46 'The Ram' must be the very bright star (α Aurigae = [[Capella]]), making it one of a select single-stars in larger asterisms that has its own | <sup>mul</sup>UDU.NITA<sub>2</sub> (𒀯𒇻𒀴), The Ram, is the star at the head of the staff in <sup>mul</sup>[[GAM3|gam<sub>3</sub>]] = ''gamlu'', 'The Crook,' ([[Auriga]]) as identified in Uranology Texts and the star-list VR 46: <sup>mul</sup>udu.nita<sub>2</sub> = sag.du <sup>mul</sup>gam<sub>3</sub>, 'The Ram' = the head of 'The Crook.' In VR 46 'The Ram' must be the very bright star (α Aurigae = [[Capella]]), making it one of a select single-stars in larger asterisms that has its own individual Sumerian-Akkadian name. This also seems to be case in Uranalogy Text E rev. 7'-8') which makes a explicit reference to one single ''(išten'') star with reference to the head of a ram, although line 9 places multiple stars in the head of the crook in 'The Crook' asterism. This uncertainty cannot be resolved as the start of rev. 8'-9' are too damaged to allow for certain reading. It is also possible that two separate ideas have been merged here: the single-star referring to the very bright star Capella, and the reference to 2 or 3 stars comprising the 'The Ram' in 'The Crook' (Capella and neighboring dimmer star(s). For multiple ideas presented side-by-side in the Uranology group compare the view of [[ḪUN.GA2|<sup>lu2</sup>ḪUN.GA<sub>2</sub>]] as alternately in human form but also sheep-form. | ||
==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>== | ||
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!Identifications | !Identifications | ||
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|''' | |'''list of stars''' '''VR 46, 1:49: <nowiki>[[should be in the GSL category??]]</nowiki> VR 46 + duplicates - how to write this everywhere???''' | ||
* <sup>mul</sup>udu.nita<sub>2</sub> = sag.du <sup>mul</sup>gam<sub>3</sub> " | * <sup>mul</sup>udu.nita<sub>2</sub> = sag.du <sup>mul</sup>gam<sub>3</sub> " | ||
* Star-Lamb = head of the Staff" [HBA<ref>''Weidner E.'' Handbuch der babylonischen Astronomie. Bd. I. Leipzig, 1915.</ref> 52; Wee 2016<ref>Wee, J. (2016). Virtual Moons over Babylonia: The Calendar Text System, Its Micro-Zodiac of 13, and the Making of Medical Zodiology. The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World, Ed. J. M. Steele, 139–229.</ref>, 162-3]; group of stars in the Charioteer ([[Auriga]]), see also (Kurtik g06) [[GAM3|GAM<sub>3</sub>]] | * Star-Lamb = head of the Staff" [HBA<ref>''Weidner E.'' Handbuch der babylonischen Astronomie. Bd. I. Leipzig, 1915.</ref> 52; Wee 2016<ref>Wee, J. (2016). Virtual Moons over Babylonia: The Calendar Text System, Its Micro-Zodiac of 13, and the Making of Medical Zodiology. The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World, Ed. J. M. Steele, 139–229.</ref>, 162-3]; group of stars in the Charioteer ([[Auriga]]), see also (Kurtik g06) [[GAM3|GAM<sub>3</sub>]] | ||
Revision as of 10:06, 26 March 2026
Authors: Gennady E. Kurtik, Wayne Horowitz, Gennady E. Kurtik, Euin Choung Kim, David Hilder, Susanne M Hoffmann, Euin Choung Kim
mulUDU.NITA2 (𒀯𒇻𒀴), The Ram, is the star at the head of the staff in mulgam3 = gamlu, 'The Crook,' (Auriga) as identified in Uranology Texts and the star-list VR 46: muludu.nita2 = sag.du mulgam3, 'The Ram' = the head of 'The Crook.' In VR 46 'The Ram' must be the very bright star (α Aurigae = Capella), making it one of a select single-stars in larger asterisms that has its own individual Sumerian-Akkadian name. This also seems to be case in Uranalogy Text E rev. 7'-8') which makes a explicit reference to one single (išten) star with reference to the head of a ram, although line 9 places multiple stars in the head of the crook in 'The Crook' asterism. This uncertainty cannot be resolved as the start of rev. 8'-9' are too damaged to allow for certain reading. It is also possible that two separate ideas have been merged here: the single-star referring to the very bright star Capella, and the reference to 2 or 3 stars comprising the 'The Ram' in 'The Crook' (Capella and neighboring dimmer star(s). For multiple ideas presented side-by-side in the Uranology group compare the view of lu2ḪUN.GA2 as alternately in human form but also sheep-form.
Concordance, Etymology, History[1]
"Star-Lamb" [Gössmann 1950[2] 142].
| Sources | Identifications |
|---|---|
list of stars VR 46, 1:49: [[should be in the GSL category??]] VR 46 + duplicates - how to write this everywhere???
|
|
Uranology Text E [MLC 1884 rev. 6-8, Beaulieu et al. 2018: 63]
translation:
|
Historical Dictionaries
| Kurtik (2022, u10) | Gössmann (1950) |
|---|---|
| «Звезда-Баран» [G. 142]. Только в списке звезд VR 46, 1:49: muludu.nita2 = sag.du mulgam3 «Звезда-Баран = голова Посоха» [HBA 52; Wee 2016, 162–3]; группа звезд в Возничем (Auriga), см. также g06GAM3. | Example |
References
- ↑ Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0, All Skies Encyclopaedia.
- ↑ Gössmann P.F. Planetarium Babylonicum, Rom, 1950 (A. Deimel. Šumerisches Lexikon 4/2).
- ↑ Weidner E. Handbuch der babylonischen Astronomie. Bd. I. Leipzig, 1915.
- ↑ Wee, J. (2016). Virtual Moons over Babylonia: The Calendar Text System, Its Micro-Zodiac of 13, and the Making of Medical Zodiology. The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World, Ed. J. M. Steele, 139–229.





