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the Altar
ANDROMEDA ANTLIA APUS AQUARIUS AQUILA ARA ARGO NAVIS ARIES AURIGA BOOTES CAELUM CAMELOPARDALIS CANCER CANIS MAJOR CANIS MINOR CANES VENATICI CAPRICORNUS CARINA CASSIOPEIA CENTAURUS CEPHEUS CETUS CHAMAELEON CIRCINUS COLUMBA COMA BERENICES CORONA AUSTRALIS CORONA BOREALIS CORVUS CRATER CRUX CYGNUS DELPHINUS DORADO DRACO EQUULEUS ERIDANUS FORNAX GEMINI GRUS
Ara as depicted in the 1723 edition of Johann Bayer's Uranometria (Skywatching) Hevelius, Firm am entum , 1690
Contents: 1. Clues to the meaning of this celestial feature 2. The fixed stars in this constellation 3. History_of_the_constellation
HERCULES HOROLOGIUM HYDRA HYDRUS INDUS LACERTA LEO LEO MINOR LEPUS LIBRA LUPUS LYNX LYRA MENSA MICROSCOPIUM MONOCEROS MUSCA NORMA OCTANS OPHIUCHUS ORION PAVO PEGASUS PERSEUS PHOENIX PICTOR PISCES PISCIS AUSTRINUS PUPPIS PYXIS RETICULUM SAGITTA SAGITTARIUS SCORPIUS SCULPTOR SCUTUM SERPENS SEXTANS TAURUS TELESCOPIUM TRIANGULUM TRIANGULUM AUSTRALIS TUCANA URSA MAJOR URSA MINOR VELA VIRGO VOLANS
from Latin ara), arid (from Latin aridus, dry, parched, from arere, to be dry), ardent, ardent ardor (from Latin ardeo, ardere, be on fire, burn), arson (from Latin arsus from ardere, to burn, be on fire, from aridus, parched), zamia (tropical American cycads of the genus Zamia from Greek azein, to dry), azalea (from Greek azaleos, dry). [Pokorny as- 68. Watkins] The word area is cognate with arid. arid "...the cut grain-sheaves arescunt , dry out for threshing, is an area , threshing-floor.' On account of the likeness to these, clean places in the city are called areae ; from which may be also the Gods' ara altar altar,' because it is cleanunless rather from ardor fire; for the intention of using it for an ardor makes it an ara ; and from this the area itself is not far away, because it is the ardor of the sun which arefacit 'does the drying.'" [Varro: On The Latin Language, 1st century AD, p.37] The English word altar is not related to Latin ara (and not related to the word 'alter,' meaning to change something). Latin altar , which was borrowed directly into Old English altar , was a derivative of the plural noun altaria , 'burnt offerings,' which probably came from the verb adolere , 'burn up.' Noah built an altar to God and made an offering: "And when the Lord smelled the pleasing odour..." [Gen 8:21] "The aroma is a picture of something pleasing to the Lord which runs throughout the Bible. In Gen 8:21, the Lord smelled the pleasing odour of the sacrifice and spoke a blessing upon the earth and mankind. Even in the sacrificial system, the rising smoke is spoken of as being a pleasing odour to the Lord (Lev 1:9) that the offerer might find acceptance before Him" http://home.clara.net/arlev/break.htm. When the waters of the flood receded, and the Ark (Latin arca) came to rest on the mountains of Ararat in Armenia. There Noah built an altar to God, the first altar mentioned in the Bible, and made an offering. The ark is also identified with the Ship Argo Navis. It has been said that Noah might have used timber from the ark to build the altar which might account for the similarity of words; (where else would he have found the wood on that treeless snowy peak?) Isidore believed arca (ark) and ara (altar) are related: "The Greeks called the front of the torso from the neck to the stomach the thorax; this is what we call the chest (arca ), because in that place is a hidden (arcanus ), that is, a secret thing, from which other people are shut out (arcere ). From this also a strong box (arca ) and an altar (ara ) derive their names, as if the words meant 'secret things' [The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville, 7th century AD, p.236.] The word ark (might belong to Argo Navis) comes from the Indo-European root *ark - 'To hold, contain, guard'. Derivatives: arcane (mysteriously obscure, arcane language), ark, ark coerce (from Latin coercere, 'to constrain.' From Latin co-, 'together,' + arcere, 'to shut up, ward off, to box in, to enclose'), coercivity, coercivity exercise (ex- + arcere, the exercise of a duty. Exercise burns up calories), autarky (self-sufficiency, from Greek arkein, to ward off suffice), arcanum (a secret known only to the members of a small select group). [Pokorny areq- 65. Watkins] The Ark of the Covenant or Ark of the Testimony is the chest containing the Ten Commandments. Major Arcana are the trumph cards. Titles for Ara were Focus, Focus Lar, Lar and Ignitabulum, Ignitabulum all meaning a Hearth; Hearth and Greek Estia (Hestia Hestia), or Roman Vesta, Vesta the goddess of the hearth (see History of the Constellation below. Manilius says Vesta is associated with Capricorn). [The smoke from the hearth of Roman homes flowed into what was called an atrium - see adjacent Triangulum Australe] "As the hearth of a house is at the same time the altar on which sacrifices are offered to the domestic gods (hestiouchoi or ephestioi), Hestia was looked upon as presiding at all sacrifices, and, as the goddess of the sacred fire of the altar, she had a share in the sacrifices in all the temples of the gods. (Hom. Hymn. in Ven. 31.) ... As the goddess of the family hearth she also presided over the cooking of bread and the preparation of the family meal. Hestia was also the goddess of the sacrificial flame and received a share of every sacrifice to the gods. ... Hestia was the goddess of hearth, home and feast. By extension she also presided over the public hearths, namely the altars of the gods, and the state hearth. [Theoi] "The goddess whom they call Hestia. Hestia Her power extends over altars and hearths, and therefore all prayers and all sacrifices end with this goddess, because she is the guardian of the innermost things." - [Cicero, De Natura Deorum 2.27 - Theoi] "The word Vesta is of uncertain origin; possibly cognate with Greek estia or hestia , 'the hearth of the house' (whence estian , 'to receive at one's hearth')" [Klein], from Indo-European root *wes- 3 'To live, dwell, pass the night, with derivatives meaning 'to be''. Derivatives: was, was were, were wassail (to drink to the health of; toast), astute (from Latin astutus, skill, craft - practiced in a town, - from Greek astu, town < 'place where one dwells'), divan (from Old Persian vahanam, house). [Pokorny 1. wes- 1170. Watkins] In Cratylus by Plato, Socrates asks Hermogenes "What did he mean who gave the name Hestia?" Hestia and Socrates answers: For example, that which we term ousia is by some called esia , and by others again osia . Now
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For example, that which we term ousia is by some called esia , and by others again osia . Now that the essence of things should be called estia , which is akin to the first of these (esia = estia , and Hestia), Hestia is rational enough. And there is reason in the Athenians calling that estia which participates in ousia . For in ancient times we too seem to have said esia for ousia , and this you may note to have been the idea of those who appointed that sacrifices should be first offered to estia (the name of Hestia), Hestia which was natural enough if they meant that estia was the essence of things. Those again who read osia seem to have inclined to the opinion of Heracleitus, that all things flow and nothing stands; with them the pushing principle (othoun ) is the cause and ruling power of all things, and is therefore rightly called osia . [Cratylus, by Plato, Part 08] ] Greek ousia 'being, essence' essence is the Ancient Greek noun formed on the feminine present participle for the Greek verb 'to be', einai , from the Indo-European root *eses 'To be'. Derivatives: prude (a characteristic of Vesta and the Vestal Virgins), prosit (a drinking toast, to wish good health or good fortune), am, am is, is yes, yes sooth, sooth soothe, soothe sin (a transgression of a religious or moral law), suttee (the old practice of a Hindu widow's cremating herself on her husband's funeral pyre), entity, entity essence, essence essential, essential abessive, abessive absent, absent adessive, adessive essive, essive improve (Middle English improwen, to enclose land for cultivation, from Anglo-Norman emprouwer, to turn to profit: Old French en-, + Old French prou, profit, from Late Latin prode, advantageous), inessive, inessive interest, interest present (present time, pre- + esse, to be), present (gift, pre- + esse), proud (pro- + esse, to be; pride), quintessence, quintessence represent, represent representation, representation stover (the dried stalks and leaves of a cereal crop, from Latin esse, to be). Basic form *es-: -ont ont, ontoonto (the present participle stem of einai to be.'In the beginning' meant also 'in the ontological principle' [1], ontogeny), ontogeny -biont biont (bi(o)- + -ont , living organism; as in symbiont), Parousia (the Second Coming, Para-ousia, feminine present participle of pareinai, from para-, beside + einai, to be). Suffixed from es-ti-; swastika (from Sanskrit svasti, well-being; su- good; and -asti, 'is') [Pokorny es- 340. Watkins] Transgendered (eunuch) priests were called essenes , 'king bees', or drones. Essential oils contain volatile aroma, or odor. odor The word sin (from *eses ) might relate to Sinai? Sinai The Ark of the Covenant or Ark of the Testimony is the chest containing the Ten Commandments; the ten injunctions given by God to Moses on Mount Sinai, Sinai against sinning. sinning "In his account of the Fasti of the Roman year, Ovid twice recounted an anecdote of Priapus' foiled attempt on a sleeping nymph: once he told it of the nymph Lotis and then again, calling it a 'very playful little tale', he retold it of Vesta, Vesta the Roman equivalent of Hestia. Hestia In the anecdote, after a great feast, when the immortals were all either passed out drunk or asleep, Priapus who had grotesquely large genitalia spied Lotis/Vesta and was filled with lust for her. He quietly approached the nymph, but the braying of an ass awoke her just in time. She screamed at the sight [as a prude would] and Priapus immediately ran away" [2]. The story is told here - Ovid, Fasti 6.319. Lotis was a nymph of Greek mythology, the daughter of Poseidon or Nereus. Priapus tried to rape her and she was changed into a lotus tree to escape him [3]. Vesta Vesta, because she is clothed (vestire ) with plants and various things, or from 'enduring by her own power' (vi sua stare). ... They call this same one both Vesta and fire, because there is no doubt that the earth possesses fire, as can be seen from Etna and Vulcanus. And they thought she was a virgin because fire is an inviolable element, and nothing can be born from it; indeed it consumes all that it seizes...Ovid in the Fasti (6.291): Understand Vesta as no other than living flame - you see no bodies born from flame. Furthermore, virgins are said to wait on her, because just as nothing is born from a virgin, so nothing is born from fire. [The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville, 7th century AD, p.187.] Isidore says Vesta Vesta, because she is clothed (vestire )...". Greek Hestia or Roman Vesta, Vesta presided at all sacrifices, she had a vested interest; interest her Vestial Virgins received a share of every sacrifice to the gods. Latin vestire is from the Indo-European root *wes- 4 'To clothe' Extension of *eu-. Derivatives: wear, wear vest, vest devest, devest invest, invest revet, revet travesty, travesty (these words from Latin vestis, garment). Suffixed form *wes-nu-; himation (woolen or linen cloak worn in ancient Greece, from Greek hennunai, to clothe). [Pokorny 5. wes1172. Watkins]. If the above associations are correct Ara would relate to these three words: Astute investments yield interest. interest Indo-European root *wes- 4 'To clothe' is an extension of *eueu 'To dress'. Latin exuere (exuuiae) is a cognate of vesta (uestis) and indutus is armor stripped from an enemy, but can also refer to a garment or animal skin. Derivatives: endue, endue indument (from induere, to put a garment on. Also a covering of fine hairs or scales), exuviae (the cast-off skins or coverings of various organisms, such as the shells of crabs or the external coverings of the larvae and nymphs of insects), reduviid (things cast off, formed from exuere to divest oneself of. The assassin bug is called reduviid, of the family Reduviidae), indusium (the amnion of the fetus, from Latin indusium, a tunic, from induere to put on). [Pokorny 2. eu- 346. Watkins] "Philolaus (fl. 470 BC) a pupil of Pythagoras, taught the earth floated in space and revolved in a circle once each day around a central fire, called 'the hearth of Zeus,' or the hearth of the universe" [4]. "[Constellation] Altar. Altar On this altar the gods are thought to have first made offerings and formed an alliance when they were about to oppose the Titanes. The Cyclopes [see adjacent Telescopium] made it. From this observance men established the custom that when they plan to do something, they make
it. From this observance men established the custom that when they plan to do something, they make sacrifices before beginning the undertaking. [Pseudo-Hyginus, Astronomica 2. 39 (trans. Grant) (Roman mythographer C2nd A.D, from Theoi] The Altar was a place where oaths were sworn: The Greek word for oath was horkos from where we get the word exorcise 'to drive out evil spirits', from Greek exorkizein, from ex- out + horkos . On the constellation Ara, Ara the altar, altar which formerly was called a well, according to Eratosthenes, Zeus swore his oath [horkos ], before he attacked his father Kronos and threw him off his throne and out of the heavens, thus usurping the rule of Olympia in the first mythical dawn of gods and turn of an era of the ancient Greeks. http://www.rkdn.org/alternative/Santa.asp Ovid expands on a theme ... that corpses littered the Athenian temples, and produces a clever and unobtrusive bilingual etymological wordplay, exoratis [exorcise exorcise] picks up the sense of imploration inherent in ara through its Greek origin. [Andreas Michalopoulos, Ancient Etymologies in Ovid's Metamorphoses] Klein says that these words (from *ark - above) "stand in gradational relationship to Orcus , name of the god of the infernal regions in Roman mythology". Michael Paschalis in Virgil's Aeneid sees Virgil as also making this connection: 'Orcus Orcus', who exercises his power of keeping her [Dido] outside the boundary of the Underworld, because she is still living. Virgil's treatment of 'Orcus Orcus' also suggests an etymological association with arceo ('keep off'). ... and 'Orcus Orcus' have to do with bonds, boundaries, and barriers: oath (Greek orkos , horkos ) 'binds'; Orcus punishes those who transgress the boundaries; 'Orcus' keeps off the living, and receives and keeps the dead within his 'enclosure'. [Virgil's Aeneid, Semantic Relations and Proper Names, p.179] Isidore gives another likely derivation: "Some call him Orcus , receiver of the dead, as it were - whence the vessel that receives water is called orca . He is also Charon in Greek. [The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville, p.186.] In Roman mythology, Orcus was a god of the underworld, punisher of broken oaths [5]. Greek orkos , horkos , meaning oath or 'to swear', is similar to the name and function of Orcus. Orcus Our word exorcise, exorcise comes from Greek orkos , horkos , meaning to drive out evil spirits, literally to swear out'. From Greek exorkezein, 'to bind by an oath; to banish an evil spirit', from Greek orkizein 'to make to swear', from orkos, 'an oath', literally 'a limitation, binding, obligation', in gradational relationship to erkhos, (for Greek serkos, 'enclosure, hedge, fence', and probably cognate with Latin sarcire, 'to patch, mend'. See sartorial [Klein]. Sartorial is from the Indo-European root *serk - 'To make whole'. Derivative: sartorius (from Latin sarcire, to mend, repair. [Pokorny serk- 912. Watkins] The sartorius is a flat narrow thigh muscle, the longest of the human anatomy, crossing the front of the thigh from the hip to the inner side of the tibia. Latin for tailor; hence, sartorius which produce the posture in which tailors once worked, squatting on the floor. The legal verb *sark - (infixed sar-ni-k-) 'make restitution', which matches Latin sarcire 'repair'. A tailor, which the Latins called sarcitector , makes clothes (Latin vestire ) to wear. wear A sarcitector also has another meaning: A sarcitector is so called because out of many planks joined together on this side and that he repairs (sarcire ) one structure of a building [The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville, 7th century AD, p.382.] The ancients saw a link between the word Aries, and the word ara , meaning altar, Isidore says: The ram (aries) is either named after the word Ares, that is, after 'Mars' - whence we call the males in a flock 'males' (mas, genitive maris) - or because this animal was the first to be sacrificed on altars (ara , genitive aris ) by pagans. So, the 'ram' because it was placed on the altar; whence also this (Sedulius, Paschal Poem 1.115): The ram is offered at the altar. [The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville, 7th century AD, p.247.] Anne Wright 2008.
delta ()
24SAG11
25SAG34
60 41 2
-37 20 53
3.79
B8
one in the Temple at Jerusalem; but others of the biblical school considered it the Altar of Noah erected after the Deluge. Euphratean research seems to show a stellar Altar differently located, which Brown says probably was the lost zodiacal sign subsequently represented by the Claws and afterwards by the Balance (Libra); and identifies it with the 7th Akkadian month and sign Tul-Ku Tul Ku, the Holy Altar, or the Illustrious Mound, perhaps a reference to the mound-altar of the Tower of Babel. When these changes were accomplished this early zodiacal Altar was removed to its present position, and its diversified altar-censer form retained from the Euphratean figuring. This recollection of the first Altar will perhaps account for the otherwise strange prominence given in classical times to our visually unimportant Ara, when Manilius called it Mundi Templum; Templum this last word also having another stellar signification, for Varro used it to indicate a division of the sky. Other details of this early Euphratean Altar are noted under Libra. Ara is not wholly visible now north of the 23d degree of latitude; and its brief period above the horizon only about four hours explains Aratos' allusion in our motto; his horizon being about the same as that of the city of New York. Gould catalogues in it eighty-five stars, from 2.8 to the 7th magnitude; but none seem to be named except in China. There alpha, 2.9 magnitude, was Choo, Choo a Club or Staff; and with beta, gamma, and iota, Low, Trailing. With theta it marks the top of the Altar's frame, culminating, on the 24th of July, just above the horizon in the latitude of New York, 40 42' 43" at the City Hall. Bayer's map carries the latter star several degrees too far to the south-west; similar errors being found in others of his constellation figures of the southern heavens. {Page 64} beta, beta a 2.8-magnitude, gamma, delta, epsilon, and zeta mark the flame rising toward the south. In China delta, 3.7, with zeta, was Tseen Yin, Yin the Dark Sky; epsilon, a 4th-magnitude, was Tso Kang, Kang the Left Watch; and e 602 of Reeves was Tseen O , Heaven's Ridge. La Lande stated that a constellation was supposed to exist here, containing Ara's stars, that was represented on the Egyptian sphere of Petosiris as a Cynocephalus (baboon). [Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning, Richard H. Allen, 1889.]