[meteorite-list] Dog Days and Sirius: was "List is Quiet"
From: Sterling K. Webb <sterling_k_webb_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 1 Aug 2010 20:23:30 -0500 Message-ID: <9C20FF3474CD473295EFBC496305070F_at_ATARIENGINE2> Bernd, List Well, yes, not every Egyptian civil calendrical year, but every true sidereal solar year. However, the Egyptians did not rely on a 12-months-of-30-days-each calendar, but inserted a block of 5 days "outside of time" (hence very calm and peaceful) to create a 365-day solar year for civil purposes. In widespread use was also a lunar calendar of 13 months of 28 days each for a 364-day year which then required the insertion on only one holiday day "outside of time" to achieve a 365-day year for religious purposes. Lunar calendars are still in widespread use as the Jewish and Muslim calendars of today. It's easy to see that a 365-day year will get one day out every four years, and that in 4 times 365 years (1460 years) the gears of the calendar wheel will reset things again to match earth and sky synchronism. This 1460 year cycle is called the Sothic cycle. However, the Egyptians knew that if you timed from one heliacal rising of Sirius to the next, you were timing a true solar sidereal year of 365.25636... days. A-Ha! you say, the precession of the equinoxes would soon ruin that correspondence, but Sirius is a nearby star with a proper motion opposite to and roughly the magnitude of the precession movement, therefore Sirius appears to be "immune" to the precession of the equinoxes in so far as can be detected without instrumented astronometry. To the Egyptians, it appeared as "fixed point," the only fixed point in the heavens. This cycle was only discovered in Egyptian texts in 1904 and there is argument as to whether the first Sothic cycle began July 19, 4241 BC or July 19, 2781 BC. The Deccan calendar of 360 days was divided into 5-day weeks, the addition of one week created the civil year. The number of days in the four years it took the civil calendar to slip one day is 1460 + 1 = 1461 days to even things up again. And of course, 1460 equals the number of years in the Sothic cycle. Equally the Deccan calendar date was 4 x 5 +1 = 21 days out every four years. Thus, it was possible to calculate the days of offset between the Deccan, civil and Sothic calendars for any date with simple calculations. Very handy and practical, as the Egyptians always were. The Romans would neaten things up further, being more practical than the Egyptians, with the leap year and 500 years ago we Westerners would fiddle with the leap year rules to make it fit even better, being more practical than Romans... The tradition of the "extra" five days entered mythology as the "Halcyon Days," but everybody will have to Google that one up themselves. Sterling K. Webb ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- Original Message ----- From: <bernd.pauli at paulinet.de> To: <Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> Sent: Sunday, August 01, 2010 4:31 PM Subject: [meteorite-list] Dog Days and Sirius: was "List is Quiet" Sterling wrote: "It is the *heliacal rising of Sirius*, the *Dog Star*, which achieved conjunction with the Sun on July 31, but won't be briefly visible on the eastern horizon at dawn until August 7th or so...It was the basis of the Egyptian calendar, for the appearance of Sirius marked the start of the rising of the Nile to flood. Anciently, the heliacal rising of Sirius at that time and latitude happened on July 23 every year." Hi Sterling and List, As for the heliacal rising of Sirius, I totally agree. That's why the first sighting of the brilliant star Sirius in the morning sky (shortly before sunrise) was regarded as the true New Year's Day by the ancient Egyptians. Unfortunately "not every year", at least for the ancient Egyptians because they used a civil year of 365 days instead of 365 ? days. They did not use our leap-year so that after about 120 years the civil year would be a whole month in advance of the astro- nomical year. Because of this defect in the civil year, it sometimes happened that the real summer fell in the winter of the civil calendar, and vice versa. Reference: GARDINER A. (1994) Egyptian Grammar (Third Edition, Revised, pp. 204-205). Best wishes, Bernd ______________________________________________ Visit the Archives at http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html Meteorite-list mailing list Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Sun 01 Aug 2010 09:23:30 PM PDT |
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