Uttara Ashadha: Difference between revisions
From All Skies Encyclopaedia
Uttara Ashadha
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{DISPLAYTITLE:}} |
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Uttara Āṣāḍhā (उत्तर आषाढा)}} |
||
[[File:21 UttaraAshadha draw.png|thumb|Uttara Ashadha, the 21st nakshatra, as depicted in temples.]] |
[[File:21 UttaraAshadha draw.png|thumb|Uttara Ashadha, the 21st nakshatra, as depicted in temples.]] |
||
[[File:20+21 stellarium.gif|thumb|The 20th and 21st nakshatra mapped to the star chart (Stellarium). Together, these two asterisms form "The Invincible" in modern Sagittarius. Animated GIF by SMH 2025 for WGSN. Uttara A. is the latter (eastern, left here). ]] |
[[File:20+21 stellarium.gif|thumb|The 20th and 21st nakshatra mapped to the star chart (Stellarium). Together, these two asterisms form "The Invincible" in modern Sagittarius. Animated GIF by SMH 2025 for WGSN. Uttara A. is the latter (eastern, left here). ]] |
||
Uttara Āṣāḍhā (उत्तर आषाढा), The Second Invincible, is an Indian name, used by the Indian Vedic tradition. Most of these names are roughly 3000 years old. They pre-date Hinduism but were taken over by it. |
|||
==Etymology and History== |
==Etymology and History== |
||
'''Name Variants''' |
|||
⚫ | Ashadha means The Invincible and refers to two asterisms in Sagittarius. The Latter (Uttara A.) is depcted as a group of two stars that are typically taken for ζ and σ Sagittarii but they actually form part of a recognizable quadrilateral which is not really logical. Yet, the identification is certain because of given coordinates for σ Sagittarii in the 2nd millennium; whether it was a different asterism BCE, is, of course, not certain. |
||
⚫ | |||
* Uttara Ashadha |
|||
⚫ | |||
* Vaiśvadeva |
|||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | Ashadha means The Invincible and refers to two asterisms in Sagittarius. The Latter (Uttara A.) is depcted as a group of two stars that are typically taken for ζ and σ Sagittarii but they actually form part of a recognizable quadrilateral which is not really logical. Yet, the identification is certain because of given coordinates for σ Sagittarii in the 2nd millennium; whether it was a different asterism BCE, is, of course, not certain. |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
==References== |
|||
⚫ | |||
[[Category:Indian]] |
|||
[[Category:Indian]] [[Category:Asterism]] [[Category:Constellation]][[Category:Eurasia]][[Category:South Asian]] |
|||
[[Category:Asterism]] |
|||
[[Category:Constellation]] |
|||
[[Category:Eurasia]] |
|||
[[Category:South Asian]] |
|||
[[Category:Zodiac]] |
[[Category:Zodiac]] |
Revision as of 15:41, 13 October 2025
Uttara Āṣāḍhā (उत्तर आषाढा), The Second Invincible, is an Indian name, used by the Indian Vedic tradition. Most of these names are roughly 3000 years old. They pre-date Hinduism but were taken over by it.
Etymology and History
Name Variants
- Uttara Ashadha
- Vaiśvadeva
Origin of Constellation
Ashadha means The Invincible and refers to two asterisms in Sagittarius. The Latter (Uttara A.) is depcted as a group of two stars that are typically taken for ζ and σ Sagittarii but they actually form part of a recognizable quadrilateral which is not really logical. Yet, the identification is certain because of given coordinates for σ Sagittarii in the 2nd millennium; whether it was a different asterism BCE, is, of course, not certain.
Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation
Mythology
mnemonic tales and cultural significance
Weblinks
References
- References (general)