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CarinaStar Lore |
Carina is a constellation in the southern hemisphere. originally part of the
constellation Argo Navis, the largest of Ptolemy's original
48 Constellations.
Because of its unwieldy size, French astronomer Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille suggested in 1763 to divide Argo Navis into three separate constellations. In 1928, the International Astronomical Union made de Lacaille's suggestion official and the Constellation is now split into Carina (the hull or the keel), Puppis (the Stern) and Vela (the Sail). |
Ancient Babylon
According to J.H. Rogers, in the
Babylonian Three Stars Each Table, the stars that later became the
constellation Carina, including the bright
Canopus (α Car) were called BIR, which translates to Kidney.
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Special attention was given to the star η Carinae. In the
MUL.APIN tables, it was listed as gishGAN.UR,
which J.H. Rogers translates as
"the star which stands at its side: the Harrow, the weapon of Mar-biti, inside of which one sees the subterranean waters."
This may have included the Carina Nebula, a large, complex area of bright and dark nebulosity. This nebula was not visible in Europe, it was re-discovered by Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille in 1752. According to R.H. Allen, "This is one of the most noted objects in the heavens, perhaps even so in almost prehistoric times, for Babylonian inscriptions seem to refer to a star, noticeable from occasional faintness in its light, that Jensen thinks was η. And he claims it as one of the temple stars associated with Ea, or Ia, of Eridhu, the Lord of the waves, otherwise known as Oannes, the mysterious human fish and greatest god of the kingdom." Sources: Wikipedia and J.H. Rogers, R.H. Allen |
Oannes © Granger Historical Picture Archive |
Ancient Egypt
Greek philosopher Plutarch attributed the constellation
Argo Navis to the Egyptian
Barque of Osiris.
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Barque of Osiris; worldhistory.org |
Ancient Greece
In Greek mythology, the constellation
Argo Navis represented the
argo, the ship that took Jason and the
Argonauts to Colchis at the
eastern shores of the Black Sea in search of the Golden Fleece.
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Argo Navis on a globe manufactured
Argo Navis in a colored version of |
The crew was under special protection by the
goddess Hera who Jason once helped when she appeared to him in the disguise of an old woman.
When Jason and the Argonauts arrived in Colchis, Medea fell in love with Jason and helped him steel the Golden Fleece using her witchcraft. (In Greek astronomy, the Golden Fleece is represented by the constellation Aries). After the Argonauts returned to Iolcus, the ship was dedicated to the Gods, who transferred it into the sky. Before Jason returned the Golden Fleece to temple of Zeus at Orchomenus, he and Medea used it to cover their wedding bed. Their love story, however did not have a happy ending. Jason abandoned Medea for Glauce, the daughter of the King of Corinth. Medea later poisoned Glauce and according to Euripides, Jason was killed by a beam from the top of the Argo, that fell from the sky and hit him in his sleep. Sources: Wikipedia, Ian Ridpath, BBC History, greeklegendsandmyths.com, mythencyclopedia.com |
The Argo painting by Konstantinos Volonakis Source: greeklegendsandmyths.com |
Greek Star Names in Carina
Canopus (α Car)
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Menelao Argo; Metropolitan Museum of Art
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Another interpretation, also reported by R.H. Allen
links the name to the ancient Egyptian harbor town Canopus in the Nile Delta.
Source: Ian Ridpath |
Medieval Arab Astronomy
Most Arabic astronomers adopted Ptolemy's constellation.
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Argo Navis in a 1417 reproduction of Al-Sufi's Book of Fixed Stars Source: sciencephoto.com |
The dismantling of the Ship
Argo Navis was the largest of Ptolemy's original 48
constellations.
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Carina |
Puppis |
Vela |
Southern Hemisphere
The interpretation of these stars as the ship of the Argonauts was limited to Greek Mythology and Arabic adaptations.
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