Constellations.
Some 90 subdivisions of the heavens, mostly
named according to some outline traced among
the principal stars within the area. There
is no sharp line of demarcation between the
various contiguous constellations. Twelve of
these groups lie along the ecliptic, and are
thus known as the Zodiac of Constellations.
At about the commencement of the Christian
era, these constellations coincided with the
divisions of the ecliptic based on the point
of the Vernal Equinox, where the ecliptic
intersects the celestial equator. Since at
no time did astrologers attribute the
influences which repose in the twelve
30-degree arcs of the Earth's annual
revolution around the Sun, to the background
of stars against which celestial positions
are measured, the name of the constellations
were appropriated and attached to the zodiac
of signs based upon the points of the
Equinoxes and the Solstices.
The
symbology of the constellations along the
ecliptic is of interest in that it is
probable the astrological significances
preceded the naming of the constellations,
which were named to symbolize the influences
ascribed to the different arcs. The
constellations of the Zodiac are:
Aries.
The ram. It is mentioned by Aratus, in the
third century B.C. According to Grecian
mythology Nephele, mother of Phrixus and
Helle, gave her son a ram with a golden
fleece. To escape the evil designs of their
stepmother, Hera, Phrixus and Helle mounted
the ram and fled. As they reached the sea
and attempted to cross, Helle fell into the
water and perished - hence, the Hellespont.
Arriving in Colchis, Phrixus was received by
the King, Aeetes, who sacrificed the ram to
Zeus, to whom he dedicated the fleece -
later carried away by Jason. Zeus translated
the ram into the heavens as a constellation.
Taurus.
The Bull. A constellation of great antiquity
containing two star-clusters: the Pleiades
and the Hyades, which are referred to in the
Old Testament. The principal star of the
Hyades, Aldebaran, is mentioned by Hesiod
and Homer. According to the Greeks it was
the bull which carried Europa across the
seas to Crete, and which Jupiter raised to
the heavens. The Hyades, named Ambrosia,
Coronis, Eudora, Pasithoë, Plexaris,
Pytho and Tycho - after the seven daughters
of Atlas - and Aethra, were also transformed
into stars by Jupiter, for bewailing the
death of their brother Hyas. The central
star of the Pleiades, Alcyone, also
Ple‹one and Atlas - are stars of the 3rd
magnitude. They were the seven daughters of
Atlas and Ple‹one, hence half-sisters of
the Hyades. They too were said to have been
turned into stars for grieving over the loss
of their sisters, and the suffering of their
father: but another account tells how the
sisters met the great hunter Orion in
Boeotia, whose passions were so inflamed at
the sight of them that he pursued them
through the woods for five years, until Zeus
translated the lot of them - the sisters,
Orion, and his dogs Sirius and Betelguese -
into the sky. As the Pleiades rise in
mid-May, they are, as daughters of Atlas,
the bringer of the fertilizing spring rains
which come out of the west; as they set at
the end of October, they are, as the pursued
of Orion, the forerunners of the autumn
storms. To them, Homer, in his Odyssey (XII.
62) probably alluded as the doves that
brought Ambrosia from the west to Zeus. That
one of the doves was lost while pursuing the
wandering rocks, the Planetae, is a
reference to the fact that one of the
Pleiades, Merope, is always invisible - from
hiding her light for shame at having had
intercourse with Sisyphus - a mortal.
However, all the Pleïades became
ancestresses of heroic or divine families,
called by the Romans: Vergiliae (probably
from ver - Spring).
Gemini.
The twins. The constellation Gemini contains
Castor and Pollux, the Dioscuri, twin sons
of Jupiter and Leda, associated with Romulus
and Remus, the founders of Rome. The
constellation Lupus represents the wolf by
whom the twins were suckled in infancy. In
other references the twins are identified as
Hercules and Apollo, and as Triptolemus and
Iasion. With the Arabians -- the twins were
a pair of peacocks.
Cancer.
The crab. It contains a loose cluster of
stars, Praesepe, the beehive, visible to the
naked eye as a nebulous patch. Aratus
mentions it in the third century B.C., and
Ptolemy catalogued 13 stars within the area,
none brighter than the 3d magnitude.
Encyclopaedia Britannica explains the name
as possibly due to the fact that at this
point the Sun, passing the point of its
greatest elongation, apparently retraces its
path in a sidelong manner resembling a crab.
Leo.
The Lion. The Nemean lion, slain by
Hercules, and raised to the heavens in his
honor, by Zeus. Regulus, the Lion's Heart,
also known as Basilicus, is its brightest
star, of a magnitude of 1-23. The Leonids
are a meteoric swarm which radiate from the
area, appearing in November.
Virgo.
The
Virgin. According to different fables she
was Justitia, daughter of Astraeus and
Ancora, who lived before man sinned, and
taught him his duty; and at the end of the
golden age she returned to her place in the
heavens. Hesiod identified her as the
daughter of Jupiter and Themis. Others
variously identify her as Erigone, daughter
of Icarius; and Parthene, daughter of
Apollo. The principal star of the
constellation is Spica, a star of the first
magnitude, with a very faint companion.
Libra.
The Balance. It was mentioned by Manetho in
the 3d century, B.C. and by Germinus in the
1st Century B.C. It was not mentioned by
Aratus, but Ptolemy catalogued 17 stars in
the area. It contains the important star
Algol, a variable, of a magnitude of from 5
to 6.2, with a period of 2d 7h 51m.
Encyclopaedia Britannica finds no
explanation for the name beyond the fact
that there the days and nights are of equal
duration, which would also apply to Aries.
Scorpio.
The Scorpion. According to a Greek myth
Orion boasted to Diana and Latona that he
would kill every animal on the Earth.
Whereupon the goddesses sent a scorpion
which stung him to death. Jupiter then
raised the scorpion to the heavens, but
later, at the request of Diana, he also
raised Orion. The chief star of the
constellation is Antares, a reddish star of
the first magnitude which has a green
companion of the seventh magnitude.
Sagittarius.
The
Archer. The Greeks represented this
constellation as a centaur in the act of
releasing an arrow; they identified him as
Crotus, son of Eupheme, the nurse of the
Muses. The constellation contains no notably
large stars.
Capricorn.
The Goat. Literally translated it means a
goat with horns. Ptolemy and Tycho Brahe
catalogued 28 stars in this area, none of
notable size. The ancients sometimes
represented it as a goat, at other times
only as the forepart of that animal with the
tail of a fish. No record is available as to
the origin of the term, but Eudoxus mentions
it in the fourth century B.C..
Aquarius.
The
Waterbearer. A constellation mentioned by
Aratus in the third century B.C. Ptolemy
catalogued 47 stars in the area; Tycho Brahe
41. There appear to be no records that
appear to connect the name with any of the
stars or configurations within the area. The
Encyclopaedia Britannica merely says that
perhaps it was because the period when it
was tenanted by the Sun was the rainy
season.
Pisces.
The
Fishes. Sometimes represented by the two
fishes tied together by their tails. It is
mentioned by Eudoxus in the fourth century
B.C., and Ptolemy catalogued 38 stars in the
area. In Greek mythology Aphrodite and Eros,
surprised by Typhon on the banks of the
Euphrates, sought safety in the water and
were changed into two fishes; but this is
said to be an adaptation of an earlier
Egyptian tale. The constellation contains no
notably large stars.
Listed
are all the constellations within 45° on
each side of the equator. The month
indicated is that in which the constellation
is on the meridian at approx. 9 P.M..
Andromeda.............
Nov.
Antlia................ Apr.
Aquarius..............
Oct.
Aquila
et Antinous.... Aug.
Aries.................
Dec.
Auriga................
Feb.
Bootes................
Jun.
Caelum................
Jan.
Cancer................
Mar.
Canes
Venatici........ May
Canis
Major........... Feb.
Canis
Minor........... Mar.
Capricornus...........
Sep.
Centaurus............. May
Cetus.................
Dec.
Columba...............
Feb.
Coma
Berenices........ May
Corona
Australis...... Aug.
Corona
Borealis....... Jul.
Corvus................
May
Crater................
Apr.
Cygnus................
Sep.
Delphinus.............
Sep.
Equuleus..............
Sep.
Eridanus..............
Dec.
Fornax................
Dec.
Gemini................
Feb.
Hercules..............
Jul.
Hydra.................
Apr.
Leo...................
Apr.
Leo
Minor............. Apr.
Lepus.................
Jan.
Libra.................
Jun.
Lupus.................
Jun.
Lyra..................
Aug.
Microscopium..........
Sep.
Monoceros.............
Mar.
Ophiuchus.............
Jul.
Orion.................
Jan.
Pegasus...............
Oct.
Pisces................
Nov.
Piscis
Austrinus...... Oct.
Puppis................
Feb
Pyxis.................
Mar.
Sagitta...............
Aug.
Sagittarius...........
Aug.
Scorpio...............
Jul.
Sculptor..............
Nov.
Scutum
Sobieskii...... Aug.
Serpens...............
Aug.
Serpens
(Caput)....... Jul.
Sextans...............
Apr.
Taurus................
Jan.
Triangulum............
Dec.
Vela..................
Mar.
Virgo.................
Jun.
Vulpeculacum
Ansere... Sep.