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Dendera zodiac

Coordinates: 26°8′30″N 32°40′13″E / 26.14167°N 32.67028°E / 26.14167; 32.67028
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26°8′30″N 32°40′13″E / 26.14167°N 32.67028°E / 26.14167; 32.67028

The Dendera zodiac as displayed at the Musée du Louvre.

The zodiac of Dendera is a bas-relief of antique Egypt]]. The original of the zodiac of Dendérah, discovered by the French general Desaix of the expedition of Egypt, and brought in [[France by Claude Lelorrain in 1821, is exposed to the Musée du Louvre.

It was originally in the ceiling of a chapel dedicated to Osiris raised on the roof of the Dendera Temple complex who was built under Pepi I Meryre and restored several times afterward up to the Ptolemaic dynasty.

Dates of eclipses

Solar eclipse on 7 March 51 BC

Sylvie Cauville of the Centre for Computer-aided Egyptological Research at Utrecht University and Éric Aubourg dated it to 50 BC through an examination of the configuration it shows of the five planets known to the Egyptians, a configuration that occurs once every thousand years, and the identification of two eclipses.[1]

The solar eclipse indicates the date of March 7, 51 BC: it is represented by a circle containing the goddess Isis liking an animal (wild boar) by the tail.

The lunar eclipse indicates the date of September 25, 52 BC: it is represented by an Eye of Horus locked into a circle.

Lunar eclipse on 25 September 52 BC

Description

The zodiac is a planisphere or map of the stars on a plane projection, showing the 12 constellations of the zodiacal band forming 36 decans of ten days each, and the planets. These decans are groups of first-magnitude stars. These were used in the ancient Egyptian calendar, which was based on lunar cycles of around 30 days and on the heliacal rising of the star Sothis (Sirius).

Its representation of the zodiac in circular form is unique in ancient Egyptian art.[citation needed] More typical are the rectangular zodiacs which decorate the same temple's pronaos.

Denderah zodiac with original colors (reconstructed)

The celestial arch is represented by a disc held up by four pillars of the sky in the form of women, between which are inserted falcon-headed spirits. On the first ring 36 spirits symbolize the 360 days of the Egyptian year.

On an inner circle, one finds constellations, showing the signs of the zodiac. Some of these are represented in the same Greco-Roman iconographic forms as their familiar counterparts (e.g. the Ram, Taurus, Scorpio, and Capricorn, albeit most in odd orientations in comparison to the conventions of ancient Greece[2] and later Arabic-Western developments), whilst others are shown in a more Egyptian form: Aquarius is represented as the flood god Hapy, holding two vases which gush water.

History

During the Napoleonic campaign in Egypt, Vivant Denon drew the circular zodiac, the more widely known one, and the rectangular zodiacs. In 1802, after the Napoleonic expedition, Denon published engravings of the temple ceiling in his Voyage dans la Basse et la Haute Egypte.[3] These elicited a controversy as to the age of the zodiac representation, ranging from tens of thousands to a thousand years to a few hundred, and whether the zodiac was a planisphere or an astrological chart.[4] Sébastien Louis Saulnier, an antique dealer, commissioned Claude Lelorrain to remove the circular zodiac with saws, jacks, scissors and gunpowder.[5] The zodiac ceiling was moved in 1821 to Restoration Paris and, by 1822, was installed by Louis XVIII in the Royal Library (later called the National Library of France. In 1922, the zodiac moved from there to the Louvre.

The "Dendera Affair"

The controversy around the zodiac, called the "Dendera Affair", involved people of the likes of Joseph Fourier (who estimated that the age was 2500 BC[6]), Thomas Young, Jean-François Champollion, and Jean-Baptiste Biot.[7] Johann Karl Burckhardt and Jean-Baptiste Coraboeuf held, after analysis of the zodiac, that the ancient Egyptians understood the precession of the equinoxes. Champollion, among others, believed that it was a religious zodiac. Champollion placed the zodiac in fourth century AD.[8] Georges Cuvier placed the date 123 AD to 147 AD.[9] His discussion of the dating question is an interesting summary of the reasoning as he understood it in the 1820's.

Notes and references

  1. ^ Marchant, Jo (5 July 2010). "Decoding the ancient Egyptians' stone sky map". New Scientist.
  2. ^ As shown for instance in the Almagest.
  3. ^ Abigail Harrison Moore, "Voyage: Dominique-Vivant Denon and the transference of images of Egypt", Art History 25.4 (2002:531–549).
  4. ^ Zodiac of Dendera, epitome. (Exhib., Leicester Square). J. Haddon, 1825.
  5. ^ http://books.google.fr/books?id=2fU-AAAAcAAJ&printsec=frontcover&hl=fr&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false
  6. ^ Francis Lister Hawks, The monuments of Egypt: Or, Egypt a witness for the Bible. John Murray, 1850. 256 pages. Page 158.
  7. ^ Biot, Recherches sur plusieurs points de l'astronomie égyptienne appliquées aux monuments astronomiques trouvés en Égypte. Paris, 1823. 8 volumes.
  8. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQ4kaFNa8Kc
  9. ^ Georges Cuvier A Discourse on the Revolutions of the Surface of the Globe (1825) in the chapter entitled "The astronomical monuments of the Ancients.", pp. 170 and 172.
  10. ^ The online book was published in 1839.